| But many Republicans are none too happy about that. A person NBC News identifies as "a top Republican strategist involved in Senate campaigns" called Graham's move "stupid, just stupid." Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R–Ky.) said, "I think most of the members of my conference prefer that this be dealt with at the state level." Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) told Politico, "I'm not sure what [Graham is] thinking here. But I don't think there will be a rallying around that concept." Chris Mottola, a GOP strategist and ad maker, called it a "bad idea," telling NBC News "it rips open a political sore. The political environment was moving back to economic issues. It further nationalizes an issue that works against Republicans generically." Democrats "could hardly believe their political good fortune" when Graham and other Senate Republicans proposed a national abortion ban, writes The Washington Post's Jennifer Rubin. An abortion ban proposal that institutes criminal penalties, contains no exceptions for maternal health or fetal abnormalities, and backtracks on the GOP's longtime assertion that abortion policy should be left up to the states is gold for Democrats itching to characterize their opponents as extremists on this issue (and to turn election-season attention toward abortion, rather than topics like inflation). And voters seemed primed to hear this message. In a recent poll, nearly half (48 percent) of respondents said Democrats were better at handling "abortion policy," while only 27 percent said Republicans were. People also indicated that the Supreme Court's June ruling overturning Roe v. Wade (1973) would make them more likely to vote. More voters—in general, and particularly among independents—have started feeling more positively toward Democrats. Graham's move seems much more likely to motivate people already likely to vote Democrat and steer more independents that way than to motivate Republicans, who are happily instituting state-level bans (many of which go further than Graham's proposal would). Even if many Republicans do wish to leave abortion issues up to the states, Democrats have wasted no time honing in on the message that Graham's bill shows Republicans' true colors. "Proposals like the one today send a clear message from MAGA Republicans to women across the country: your body, our choice," said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D–N.Y) on the Senate floor. "It's great that [Republicans are] showing the American people that they're really focused on taking away a fundamental right," Sen. Gary Peters (D–Mich.) said. "The nationwide abortion ban proposal put forth today is the latest, clearest signal of extreme MAGA Republicans' intent to criminalize women's health freedom in all 50 states and arrest doctors for providing basic care," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D–Calif.) in a statement. "Make no mistake: if Republicans get the chance, they will work to pass laws even more draconian than this bill – just like the bans they have enacted in states like Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma." The bill isn't just potentially politically toxic but constitutionally suspect, too. It's "based on an audacious claim of congressional authority to regulate abortion that obliterates the constitutional distinction between state and federal powers," notes Reason's Jacob Sullum. But the Constitution "does not give Congress the authority to regulate abortion or any other medical practice," points out Sullum. He also notes that if Congress can ban abortion because of the Commerce Clause, it can also say states cannot ban it. It's also out of step with European countries' policies, even though Republicans keep claiming it puts us in line with them. "Republicans tend to talk about bills that set a deadline for abortion around the end of the first trimester as being similar to laws that prevail in Western Europe, but by not offering a broader health exception, Graham's bill would impose a significantly tighter restriction," notes Josh Barro. Meanwhile, Michelle Goldberg, a New York Times opinion columnist, points out that bans in Europe tend to contain exceptions for fetal abnormalities. "Why did Graham leave such an exception, which the vast majority of Americans would almost certainly support, out of his proposed abortion ban?" she asks. "There are two possibilities, which are not mutually exclusive. Either he was pandering to the anti-abortion activists who, on Monday, sent a letter to Congress demanding federal action against states with liberal abortion laws, or he simply hasn't thought very much about what pregnancy entails." In other abortion-related news: • A judge has temporarily halted Ohio's six-week abortion ban. • West Virginia this week "passed a bill to prohibit nearly all abortions, making it the second state to pass a new ban since the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade in June," notes The Washington Post. • An Indiana ban on almost all abortions—passed in August—takes effect today. |
No comments:
Post a Comment