EVEN AFTER SUFFERING multiple state-wide losses on the issue, the Republican Party is not backing down on abortion, party chair Ronna McDaniel said.

“I’m proud to be a pro-life party, but we can win on this message,” McDaniel said on Sunday’s Meet the Press. “The American people are where we are, and they want common sense limitations. They want more access to adoption. We want to make sure that there’s pregnancy crisis centers. These are things we can win on.”

    • Bone@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Not to burst bubbles, but 2022 saw them take the House back. What they’ve done with it 🤷‍♂️ But it’s still a win.

      • halferect@lemmy.world
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        If you are supposed to win 30 plus house seats and only get 9 and are gonna take control of the senate but you lose a extra seat giving democrats the majority I think I would consider that losing. I think it’s worse because historically Republicans should have won the house and senate no problem but got absolutely destroyed.

      • Billiam@lemmy.world
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        Yes, but they won far fewer seats than they were projected to. They should have had something like a 30 seat majority, but currently only have 9. A sane party would have looked at that as a warning sign, but…

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      She can keep winning like that as long as she pleases then.

  • Raging LibTarg@lemmy.world
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    Anybody else catch this opinion article The Hill posted the other day? Truly fucking incredible how Republicans will lie right to our faces about what their stances are on abortion.

    First it was “states rights”, which was immediately followed by “time for a nationwide ban” after Dobbs.
 When it actually came time for states rights on abortion, it was immediately followed by “we’re gonna do everything we can to stop this” when they lost on it.
 Now they want to try to downplay what they really mean by “abortion restrictions” when everyone can plainly see their actions belie their words.
 They really think we’re fucking dumb, don’t they?

    • Sovereign_13@lemmy.world
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      Well, to be fair…

      A lot of the people that reliably vote for them are (willfully) fucking dumb.

      When you’ve built your “platform” on the basis that the people who vote for you are just going to take whatever you say at face value, you might be surprised that only a minority of people work that way.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      Wow, that op-ed is something.

      Simply put, most Republicans are moving toward where the majority of Americans are, wanting abortion to be legal but limited to the first 15 weeks of pregnancy. For proof, look no further than the stance of former president Donald Trump, who is leading the GOP primary race by a wide margin; he has called Florida’s six-week abortion ban “terrible” and is pushing back against a nationwide law outlawing the procedure.

      So, wait, who put that 6 week ban up in the first place? I’m guessing not Democrats.

  • NataliePortland
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    I’m honestly so glad to hear this. GOP is only digging Their own grave with this. Let them go hard. Let them loudly label every R with pro-life. They’ve lost almost every election local and National with that and they will keep on losing.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    “I’m proud to be a pro-life party, but we can win on this message,” McDaniel said on Sunday’s Meet the Press.

    When asked about the Senate Republican campaign arm telling candidates to oppose a national abortion ban, McDaniel said, “We’re going to let the legislators and the Senators and congressional members stake their lane out.

    As of this past May, the majority of voters (63 percent) oppose the Dobbs decision that overturned federal abortion protections, according to Gallup.

    Elsewhere — in Kentucky, Montana and Kansas — voters have voted down efforts to restrict abortion access.

    And on the recent election day in Virginia, voters had an opportunity to keep a red state senate and flip the legislature, but instead Democrats won in both houses, creating a stopgap that will prevent GOP Gov.

    Glenn Youngkin from pushing through anti-abortion legislation he hoped to pass.


    The original article contains 360 words, the summary contains 142 words. Saved 61%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!