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On abortion, voters still lean to the wobbly middle

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden is taking heat and light for his recent switcheroo on abortion rights. But Biden is hardly alone in his inconsistency on this volatile issue. Some of us remember how now-president Donald Trump made a famous abortion switcheroo too.

Biden's big switch came in early June, two days after he reaffirmed his support for the Hyde Amendment, which bans federal funding for most abortions. For decades, the mostly pro-choice Biden voted nevertheless for the Hyde Amendment, citing his Catholic faith and a belief that anti-abortion taxpayers should not have their tax dollars used to fund abortions.

But after two days of attacks from his many rivals in the 2020 Democratic field, Biden cited "extreme laws" passed or proposed by Republicans to roll back abortion access in states across the country -- especially in the South -- to justify changing his mind.

"If I believe health care is a right, as I do," he told a Democratic National Committee gala in Atlanta, "I can no longer support an amendment that makes that right dependent on someone's ZIP code."

Republicans and anti-abortion activists predictably pounced, but Trump already made that criticism more than a little awkward by pulling a switcheroo of his own -- in the other political direction.

Back in 1999, Trump the outspoken celebrity real estate developer told NBC's Tim Russert that even regarding late-term abortions, he was "very pro-choice."

 

Until his 2016 presidential campaign, anyway. That's when Trump declared in a heated town hall exchange with MSNBC host Chris Matthews that "you have to ban" abortion and "there has to be some form of punishment" for women who have one anyway.

That drew fire from both sides of the debate. Anti-abortion activists disliked his adding fuel to the notion that they would want to jail women. Many of them call that a myth, although their attitude toward abortion doctors tends to be less merciful.

Trump's campaign issued a statement that same day to clarify that his call for punishment applied only to the doctor and other medical practitioners performing an abortion, not the woman having one. That clarity mattered. His tough anti-abortion stance helped him to win about 85% of the evangelical Christian vote and keep their support as part of his fiercely loyal base.

Yet he also has reawakened pro-abortion rights activism among Democrats, as evidenced by Biden's shift. Already under fire from the progressive wing, the moderate Biden is merely trying to catch up with his party so that he might lead it.

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(c) 2019 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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