Springfield News-Sun

Ky. AG avoids talk of more exceptions to abortion ban

- By Bruce Schreiner

FRANKFORT,KY.— Kentucky’s attorney general stood firmly behind the state’s near-total abortion ban Monday, saying he promotes Kentucky values “without fear or favor” though the Republican gubernator­ial candidate stopped short of saying whether he supports adding more exceptions to the ban.

At a news conference, Daniel Cameron refrained from commenting on calls for the state to include exceptions for pregnancie­s caused by rape or incest, avoiding a subject that has divided Republican­s nationwide since the U.S. Supreme Court gave states the authority to determine abortion law themselves.

Cameron, one of many Republican­s gearing up to compete for the chance to challenge Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear in his bid for a second term, also proceeded with caution when asked about former President Donald Trump’s recent dinner with a Holocaust-denying white nationalis­t. Trump recently dined in Florida at his Mar-a-lago club with Nick Fuentes, a far-right activist who has used his online platform to spread antisemiti­c and white nationalis­t rhetoric.

Asked about the dinner in an interview Monday, Cameron told The Associated

Press: “I don’t keep up with who the president is having dinner with.”

Cameron, who is Black, won Trump’s endorsemen­t earlier this year and has touted Trump’s backing in his bid for the GOP nomination for governor. Looking beyond Trump’s controvers­ies, Cameron said “the working men and women of this commonweal­th appreciate­d the policies that were put forth by the prior administra­tion.”

On the abortion ban, Cameron said he supports the actions of the state’s Republican-dominated legislatur­e in passing the state’s trigger law that prohibited nearly all abortions. Approved in 2019, the measure took effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned in June by the U.S. Supreme Court. The state law carved out narrow exceptions to save a pregnant woman’s life or to prevent disabling injury.

“It expressed the view of the commonweal­th as it related to how we’re going to protect life,” Cameron said at the news conference. “So I continue to stand in support of that law and will continue to stand up for life.”

Asked Monday if he personally supports adding those exceptions, Cameron replied: “I support what the Human Life Protection Act says” — a reference to the trigger law. He then expressed support for the existing exception to save the life of a pregnant woman.

His position stands in stark contrast with Beshear’s. The governor supports abortion rights and has denounced the trigger law as “extremist,” pointing to the lack of exceptions for rape and incest victims.

Kentucky voters this month made their feelings known when they rejected a ballot measure that would have denied protection­s for abortion in the state’s constituti­on. Abortion rights supporters secured other midterm wins elsewhere including Michigan, California and Vermont, where voters opted to enshrine abortion rights in their state constituti­ons.

About a dozen states have laws restrictin­g abortion without exceptions for victims of rape or incest. While such exceptions were once regularly included in even the most conservati­ve anti-abortion proposals, that’s changed as battles over abortion have intensifie­d. Republican­s have at times split over whether to include exceptions to abortion bans.

In Kentucky, Cameron’s office is defending the trigger law against a court challenge, A separate six-week ban that state lawmakers approved also is being challenged by the two remaining abortion clinics in the Bluegrass State — both in Louisville.

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