-
Man Wakes Up to Find Cat Cuddling Him in Bed—But There’s a Problem - 16 mins ago
-
Could One Phone Call Lead to the 28th Amendment? - 20 mins ago
-
How to fix broken University of California, Cal State systems - 42 mins ago
-
Cowboys’ Jerry Jones Refuses To Answer if Mike McCarthy Will Return - 51 mins ago
-
Mpox Is Spreading in Congo’s Capital, Threatening Global Efforts to Contain the Virus - about 1 hour ago
-
California sees big population rebound after years of losses - about 1 hour ago
-
Blake Lively Lawsuit Over ‘Smear Campaign’—Everything We Know - about 1 hour ago
-
Top Arab Diplomats Visit Syria to Build Ties With New Leadership - 2 hours ago
-
Dog ‘Terrified’ of Owner’s Christmas Decoration Melts Hearts - 2 hours ago
-
Whittier sued over plan to raze more than 100 trees - 2 hours ago
Conversations and insights about the moment.
On Wednesday, anti-abortion activists packed the gallery of the Arizona House to protest plans to repeal the state’s unpopular 1864 abortion ban. Before the day’s legislative business began, a man in a white cowboy hat, invoking a tradition from Donald Trump rallies, pointed at the media section and led the crowd in angry chants of “shame!”
This seemed to me ironic, since it was Trump himself, far more than any journalist, who encouraged a small but decisive faction of Republicans to break with anti-abortion leaders and erase Arizona’s sweeping abortion prohibition, which the House did on a 32-to-28 vote. The Senate could vote on the issue next week.
I’d gone to the Capitol in part because I was curious about whether the anti-abortion movement felt betrayed by Republicans. After all, for decades the party has mostly done the movement’s bidding, but on Wednesday, bowing to popular pressure, three Republicans joined Democrats in favor of repeal. Arizona is thus almost certain to become the first state with a Republican legislature to back off its most draconian post-Roe abortion restrictions.
This might never have happened had Trump not come out for scrapping the Victorian-era statute, followed by Kari Lake. (Though she’s since flip-flopped again, lamenting the refusal of Arizona’s attorney general to enforce the 1864 ban.)
After the vote, activists were furious at the Republican lawmakers who broke ranks. A few were unhappy with Lake. No one who I spoke to, however, blamed Trump. Several were unaware that Trump opposed the 1864 law.
“I didn’t hear that, no,” said Karen Mountford, a Republican precinct committeeman — Arizona Republicans don’t use gender-neutral titles — wearing a “Trump Girl” T-shirt.
Anthony Kern, a far-right Republican state senator, who was pontificating outside the Capitol about the need to return to America’s Christian foundations, pledged that the three Republicans who voted to scrap the abortion ban would be unseated. Lake, he said, is “wrong on this issue.” But Trump? “I’m going to give him the benefit of the doubt because he has been the most pro-life president ever,” said Kern.
Perhaps this flexibility isn’t surprising: later on Wednesday, Kern was indicted by the state, accused of fraud and forgery for his role in Arizona’s fake Trump electors scheme.
In 2016, Christian conservatives argued they had to vote for Trump in order to ban abortion. Eight years later, Trump has become an end in himself; for him and only him, wobbliness on abortion can be overlooked.
Source link