Republican Texas House candidate David Lowe wants you to know that he isnât a fan of the death penalty. But heâs willing to make an exception for women who receive abortions.
âDo we all agree that abortion is murder?â Lowe asked a crowd at a recent event. âThere should be consequences for it.â
Lowe is speaking the love language of a toxically Trumpified GOP.
Extremist state lawmakers around the country no longer want to stop at banning abortion. In their twisted morality, a woman should be publicly shamed and hauled into court for even daring to exercise their constitutional right to get an abortion. If passed, nightmarish legislation would put these red states on par with repressive regimes like Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran.
The fight for abortion rights is embedded deep in the Democratic Partyâs DNA. At least, it should be.
In practice, youâd be hard-pressed to find a single senior Democrat willing to talk about abortion on the recordâor back calls to make abortion rights a major issue in the looming midterm elections. What the hell happened?
Listen, I understand the prevailing Beltway consulting wisdom. These bills will blow over. Itâll be challenged in court, make a stand then. And yes, Itâs tempting to think that common sense and cooler heads willâmustâprevail on an issue so fundamental as a womanâs freedom to exist. But thatâs a fantasy in an America where Republicans command majorities in 30 states, and in 23 states the GOP holds entirely unified control of state government. Insulated from political challenges by gerrymandering and voter suppression, state Republicans have taken off their masks to introduce a horror show of anti-abortion legislation.
Just last year, Texas State Rep. Bryan Slaton introduced HB 3326, which would have allowed prosecutors to seek the death penalty for women who seek abortions. This year, red statesâ Republican supermajorities are debating bills that restrict womenâs freedom of movement, criminalize miscarriages, threaten doctors jail or women with execution, and ban abortion in open defiance of federal authority.
The same Republicans who shouted that electing Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar (a Muslim immigrant from Somalia) would bring âSharia Lawâ to America are now building their own radical fundamentalist state governments.
What you wonât see is President Joe Biden addressing this unprecedented assault on womenâs rights with a major public address. After all, Biden has made it over a full year into his presidency without giving a single major speech about abortion. He even studiously avoided the word during his State of the Union address, giving an hourlong speech that spared only two sentences for the GOPâs national war on women.
âDemocrats love to bargain away the lives of marginalized people in an effort to appeal to âreal Americans,â which is a big problem in terms of values but also in terms of electoral math,â Amelia Bonow, founding director of Shout Your Abortion, told The Daily Beast. âA quarter of us have had abortions. Abortion rights are supported by 70 percent of Americans, and there isnât majority support to overturn Roe in a single state. When it happens anyway, Democrats who enabled this cataclysmic failure will pay with their careers.â
The common, dismissive response among centrist Democrats is that Biden is, You know, busy preventing World War III with Russia. Thatâs undeniably true, and Americaâs homegrown humanitarian crises may seem small compared to Bidenâs responsibility to address the powder-keg situation in Ukraine.
But Biden also commands the massively powerful machinery of the executive branch, and his presidency should be judged on how effectively he wields that machinery to solve multiple pressing problems. That includes ramping up the Department of Justice to aggressively fight states that are knowingly, flagrantly violating womenâs abortion rightsâas with Missouriâs illegal push to strip Medicaid reimbursement from Planned Parenthood.
What Biden and national Democrats must do is amplify the grassroots work of state Democratic parties.
Texas is in dire need of both Democratic National Committee support and a national platform that only Democrats in Washington can provide. The same goes for Missouri, where Republican lawmakers are debating a staggeringly repressive bill that would allow private citizens to haul women into court for traveling out of state to receive an abortion. Missouriâs proposal casts a wide net: the Uber driver who transported the woman across state lines could be sued, too, as could the friend who helped her make the appointment. The Taliban, who recently mandated that all Afghan women be âaccompaniedâ by male chaperones, would be proud.
Just because Congress canât enshrine abortion rights into federal law doesnât mean their voices arenât essential to curbing the democracy rot now spreading through red states. But can we expect Americans to view abortion rights as a crisis when our elected leaders donât seem worried? For activists and the Democratic faithful in Idaho, which recently introduced an outright ban on abortion after just six weeks of pregnancy, national recognition of their fight would be both a much-needed morale boost and a gift to fundraising and organizing momentum.
The expanded GOP war on women is an imminent threat not only to abortion rights as defined in Roe, but to the broader privacy rights that made Roe possible. And with Republicans building repressive, authoritarian fortresses in states they control, a lack of Democratic urgency now will mean a more costly, more dangerous fight in 2024.
In an era of steadily advancing GOP lawlessness, Democrats can no longer afford to remain silent on abortion.