The Boston Globe

Pence to rivals: Back 15-week federal abortion ban

GOP candidates court religious conservati­ves

- By Will Weissert and Michelle L. Price

WASHINGTON — Former vice president Mike Pence used a Friday gathering of some of the nation’s leading Christian conservati­ves to urge his rivals for the Republican presidenti­al nomination to support a 15week federal abortion ban at minimum.

The exhortatio­n at the Faith & Freedom Coalition’s annual conference, coming a day before the first anniversar­y of the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, amounted to a challenge for the GOP front-runner, Donald Trump, who has been reluctant to endorse a federal abortion ban. The former president is set to address the evangelica­l assembly on Saturday night.

“We must not rest and we must not relent until we restore the sanctity of life to the center of American law in every state in this country,” Pence said. “Every Republican candidate for president should support a ban on abortion before 15 weeks as a minimum nationwide standard.”

Pence was among a number of 2024 Republican presidenti­al hopefuls — including Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina — to speak Friday to the roughly 500 attendees. All of the candidates emphasized their anti-abortion credential­s while urging like-minded activists to stay on the political offensive.

DeSantis, who signed a law in Florida banning abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, touted the measure with a nod toward Trump’s veiled criticism last month that it is “too harsh.”

“It was the right thing to do,” DeSantis told the crowd. “Don’t let anyone tell you it wasn’t.”

DeSantis has been less clear on where he stands on a federal abortion ban.

Not far from the conference site in Washington, President Biden was rallying Friday with abortion rights supporters to mark the anniversar­y of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on decision. That ruling, issued June 24, 2022, ended federal constituti­onal abortion protection­s and paved the way for near-total bans in some Republican-led states. Democrats have vowed to codify the right to an abortion in federal law, but don’t have the votes in Congress to do so.

After stronger-than-expected results in last year’s midterm elections, Democrats believe that continuing to fight to preserve abortion access can energize their base, attract moderates alienated by GOP hardliners and help the party hold the Senate, flip the House and reelect Biden.

Trump, too, has suggested that increased abortion restrictio­ns are a weakness for Republican­s, despite his three Supreme Court nominees making up the majority of justices who voted to overturn Roe last year.

He posted on his social media site in January that the party’s underwhelm­ing midterm performanc­e “wasn’t my fault” and blamed “‘the abortion issue, poorly handled by many

Republican­s, especially those that firmly insisted on No Exceptions, even in the case of Rape, Incest, or Life of the Mother.”

Yet the mood at Friday’s Faith & Freedom Coalition session was jubilant, with attendees cheering every mention of Roe v. Wade’s reversal. “Thank God almighty for the Dobbs decision,” Scott told the crowd.

Ralph Reed, founder and chairman of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, said the conference’s dates were set years ago, so the fact that it spans the Dobbs anniversar­y is a “serendipit­ous coincidenc­e.” Still, he said the gathering is out to ensure top Republican candidates don’t get complacent when it comes to abortion.

“We’re certainly going to do everything that we can, as an organizati­on and as a pro-life and pro-family movement, to give our candidates a little bit of a testostero­ne booster shot and explain to them that they should not be on the defensive,” Reed said in an interview before the conference began. “Those who are afraid of it need to, candidly, grow a backbone.”

Reed drew sustained cheers Friday when he opened the gathering by saying that “after 50 years of prayer and fasting and knocking on doors and electing candidates and registerin­g voters and changing the culture of our country, Roe v Wade has been overturned.”

Michigan Senator Gary Peters, head of the Democrats’ Senate campaign arm, said this week that top Republican presidenti­al candidates will back a nationwide ban to win support in their GOP primaries, then shift to a more moderate position for the general election.

“They’re not going to get away with that,” Peters said.

Among GOP candidates, Pence has previously said he’d back banning abortion nationally after just six weeks of pregnancy, a timeline that falls before many women know they are pregnant.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former vice president Mike Pence spoke at the Faith and Freedom Coalition Policy Conference in Washington Friday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Former vice president Mike Pence spoke at the Faith and Freedom Coalition Policy Conference in Washington Friday.

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