News

Trump distances himself from six-week abortion ban signed by DeSantis: ‘Too harsh’ – LifeSite

(LifeSiteNews) – Former President Donald Trump distanced himself from banning abortion once a heartbeat can be detected in a new interview while again refusing to clarify his own position on what to do at the federal level in America’s post-Roe landscape.

When asked by The Messenger about the six-week abortion ban signed in April by his chief rival for the Republican presidential nomination, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Trump said, “he has to do what he has to do. If you look at what DeSantis did, a lot of people don’t even know if he knew what he was doing. But he signed six weeks, and many people within the pro-life movement feel that that was too harsh.” When asked if he would sign a similar law, Trump would only say that he was “looking at all alternatives. I’m looking at many alternatives.”

The former president claimed credit for the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling last summer overturning Roe v. Wade for “get[ting] us to the table,” which he claimed “nobody else could have done…but me.” During his term, Trump had the opportunity to fill three vacancies on the nation’s highest court, which he and the Republican-controlled Senate did using a list of judges given to him by the conservative Federalist Society and Heritage Foundation, ultimately picking nominees whose positions on Roe he previously said he did not ask about.

— Article continues below Petition —
Tell Donald Trump he MUST support a 6-week abortion ban
  Show Petition Text
67 have signed the petition.
Let’s get to 1000!
Thank you for signing this petition!
Add your signature:
  Show Petition Text

Donald Trump has suggested a 6-week abortion ban is ”too harsh”, attacking Gov. Ron DeSantis for his bill protecting innocent human life. 

It’s time for former President Trump to realize that pro-life voters won’t support a candidate who abandons vulnerable unborn babies.

SIGN: Donald Trump MUST support a 6-week abortion ban

The former president said he is ”looking at all options” when asked if he would support such a ban, making this a crucial opportunity for pro-life voters to make their views known to him in no uncertain terms. 

“He has to do what he has to do,” Trump said about Gov. DeSantis’ abortion bill. “If you look at what DeSantis did, a lot of people don’t even know if he knew what he was doing. But he signed six weeks, and many people within the pro-life movement feel that that was too harsh.”

Mr. Trump’s claim about anyone in the pro-life movement opposing the ban is doubtful to say the least, but there was more to follow in the interview.

When pressed on whether he thought the bill was ”too harsh”, Trump would not answer directly, instead saying: ”I’m looking at all alternatives. I’m looking at many alternatives. But I was able to get us to the table by terminating Roe v. Wade. That’s the most important thing that’s ever happened for the pro-life movement.”

The former president is correct in saying the overturning of Roe v. Wade was a monumental step for the pro-life movement, but it should only be the beginning of banning the killing of babies in the womb entirely.

Donald Trump’s reluctance to get behind a 6-week abortion ban spells trouble for every citizen concerned about ending abortion, which is why we need you to take part in this urgent petition to him.

SIGN & SHARE: We must change Donald Trump‘s mind on abortion

Our true loyalty is to innocent human beings facing death, none more so than those in the womb, and any candidate who prevaricates about something so important to building a civilized society has to be corrected.

We urge all Republican candidates to advocate for an eventual total ban on abortion, without any exceptions – not just at 6-week’s gestation as an incremental measure.

Please sign and share our petition urging Donald Trump to do the right thing. 

  Hide Petition Text

Overturning Roe “gave us a tremendous power of negotiation, which we didn’t have, the pro-life movement, a tremendous power of negotiation,” Trump said. “Now the pro-life movement has the power to negotiate a deal that’s acceptable for them.” It is unclear what precisely about abortion policy he believes should be negotiated or what limits he expects Democrats to agree to.

As for abortion more generally, Trump said, “first of all, I’m a believer in the exceptions, right? And just as Ronald Reagan was a believer in the exceptions, but I’m a believer in the exceptions … the life of the mother, raping and incest.  … The other thing I really believe is that the radicals are people that would have a baby destroyed, killed at the end of the ninth month or even after birth.”

Over the years, various moderate Republicans have misstated Reagan’s position to justify support for abortion exceptions. But while Reagan expressed support for a rape exception in 1975, two years after Roe, by the time he became president, he had come to oppose it, advocating a constitutional amendment to ban abortion nationwide for any reason except to save a mother’s life.

The interview continues weeks of confusion on how strongly Trump, who was “pro-choice” for most of his life as a liberal celebrity but had a generally pro-life record in office, would approach abortion in a hypothetical second term.

The questions began in April, when his campaign told the Washington Post that abortion now “should be decided at the State level,” prompting strong denunciations from pro-life leaders Lila Rose of Live Action, Kristan Hawkins of Students for Life of America, and Marjorie Dannenfelser of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, who vowed to “oppose any presidential candidate who refuses to embrace at a minimum a 15-week national standard.”

Eighteen days later, Dannenfelser praised Trump for a “terrific” meeting with herself, pro-Trump Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, during which Trump reportedly reiterated his support for exceptions and opposition to Democrat extremism on the issue, without committing to the “minimum” 15-week standard.

On May 3, Trump declined to clearly answer whether he would sign a 15-week ban, saying instead, “we’re going to look at it. We’re looking at a lot of different options […] I think we’ll get it done on some level. It could be on different levels, but we’re going to get it done. I know the issue very well, I think I know the issue better than most and we will get that taken care of.”

Last week, appearing on a nationally-televised CNN town hall, Trump repeatedly refused to give a clear answer, saying instead that he was “looking at a solution that’s going to work – very complex issue for the country. You have people on both sides […] I want to do what’s right. And we’re looking.”

Previous ArticleNext Article