WASHINGTON — First it was Todd Akin. Then Steve King. Then Joe Walsh. Then Richard Mourdock. One after another, Republican congressional nominees opened their mouths, inserted their feet and embarrassed their party.

Akin, a congressman running for U.S. Senate in Missouri, said rape survivors don’t need abortions because “if it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”

King, an Iowa congressman up for re-election, deflected a question about abortions for 12-year-old rape victims by saying, “I just haven’t heard of that being a circumstance that’s been brought to me in any personal way.”

Walsh, a House incumbent in Illinois, asserted that “with modern technology and science, you can’t find one instance” where abortion is necessary to protect a woman’s life or health. “There is no such exception as life of the mother,” Walsh concluded. “And as far as health of the mother, same thing.”

Mourdock, the Indiana state treasurer and Republican nominee for U.S. Senate, opined that “even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that God intended to happen.”

For Mitt Romney, these episodes have been a two-month headache. First, he had to override Paul Ryan’s opposition to abortions for rape victims. Then he had to apologize for Akin’s comment. Then he had to apologize for Mourdock’s. And the apology tour might be just getting started, because Akin and Mourdock are hardly alone. Their view — that abortion should be prohibited even in cases of sexual assault — isn’t just the party’s official position. It’s the most commonly held position among new Republican nominees for the U.S. Senate.

Thirty-three Senate seats are at stake in this election. Five of them are held by Republican incumbents whose nominations were never seriously contested. In the remaining 28 states, three nominations (Connecticut, Hawaii and Rhode Island) were won by pro-choice candidates. Maine Republicans nominated a guy who said he’s “pro-choice specifically for three reasons: rape, incest, life of the mother.” New Jersey Republicans picked a state senator who advocated “pro-life initiatives” and “reasonable restraints” but said abortion should be legal early in pregnancy and for rape victims. Eight nominations (Arizona, California, Florida, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, and Wisconsin) went to candidates who said abortion should be outlawed except in cases of rape or incest. Three (Delaware, Maryland and Minnesota) went to pro-lifers who haven’t clarified their stance on exceptions. The rest — 12 nominations — went to candidates who would ban abortion even for survivors of sexual assault. That’s a plurality of the party’s primaries.

Akin and Mourdock are the best-known cases. But Ted Cruz, the solicitor general of Texas, also opposes a rape exception. So does Pennsylvania nominee Tom Smith. So does West Virginia nominee John Raese: “I will proudly stand against the destruction of innocent human life unless the life of the mother is in jeopardy.” In Vermont, the state right-to-life committee certified Republican nominee John MacGovern as “fully pro-life.” When MacGovern was asked whether “a woman should be forced by the government to give birth to a rapist’s baby,” he answered: “I’ve always in my career and to this day been loyal to the principle of life. I’m pro-life. I’m profoundly pro-life. I’m pro-life to my core.”

In Nebraska, state Rep. Deb Fischer was pressed for her position on the Republican platform’s call for “a constitutional amendment banning all abortions with no exception for rape or incest.” She responded: “I am pro-life, and I believe in the sanctity of life. I do believe that there should be an exception made for the life of the mother.” In Ohio, state treasurer Josh Mandel rejected a rape exception and declared, “I’ll do everything I can to protect innocent life.” In Michigan, Rep. Pete Hoekstra was asked whether a woman should have to bear her rapist’s child. Hoekstra, who was already on record against a rape exception, replied: “I believe life is a gift.”

In New York, Wendy Long, a member of Romney’s Justice Advisory Committee, boasted during her primary that she was “100 percent pro-life,” whereas her opponents would grant “exceptions” to an abortion ban. In Washington, state Sen. Michael Baumgartner admitted that “rape is a tragedy” but concluded: “I still believe life begins at conception. That is consistent with my Catholic beliefs. And I believe we must protect life.” In North Dakota, a reporter asked Rep. Rick Berg: “You would not make an exception for rape?” Berg replied: “No.”

Three of the party’s candidates seem not to have addressed the rape question. Kevin Wade, the nominee in Delaware, has repeatedly said he opposes “taking human life.” Dan Bongino, the nominee in Maryland, opposes federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research and believes “life begins at conception and should be protected.” Kurt Bills, the nominee in Minnesota, reportedly sidestepped a rape question but opposes embryonic stem-cell research and boasts that he’s been a “co-author on every . . . bill” backed by Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life.

Judging by polls, most Republican voters don’t share this view. And I haven’t tried to nail down where the party’s hundreds of House nominees stand. But the Senate numbers are striking. Of the 28 nonincumbent nominees, 12 to 15 share the view of Akin, Mourdock and the party platform. They believe a rape victim should be forbidden to terminate her pregnancy. This is no longer a fringe position. It isn’t a couple of gaffes by renegade crackpots. It’s the predominant view among Republican nominees for the nation’s highest legislative body. It’s what the Republican Party is.

Slate intern Sarah Tory helped with research for this article.

Saletan ( @saletan) covers science, technology and politics for Slate.

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81 Comments

  1. Due mostly to Tea Party/American Taliban and the GOP’s insistence that all taxes and all forms of government are bad, the GOP itself is now largely nothing but an embarrassment to our country. The only way to fix that is to vote every conservative running for office out and replace them with liberals. Vote Democratic!

      1. The you tube video link you provided links to Moveon.org they never distort the truth. The 21st century’s Felix Dzerzhinsky

          1. ok now you’re just being silly, or “really simple”, Fox and Friends?  Hannity? Oreilly? they make stuff up! and that nutty show on in the afternoon with the 4 rabid neocons passing as journalists (and 1 poor beaten down lefty) are full of Murdock and Ailes fabrications!

            Come on man THINK!   But I know that righties go there to be pandered too, told everyday how evil them Democrat moonbats are and how Obama is a dog eatin Kenyan/Mulsim/Socialist and how you guys need to take back the country…  it’s laughable, except you guys take it all as fact.

          2. Just as lefties go to msnbc to  get their dose of Matthews & Maddow and you take that as fact. As for Murdock, he’s not being funded by Soros, like moveon.org is, and  Ruppert”s Wall Street Journal is light years ahead of the New York Times. That being said…most critics of  Fox speak of it  in absentia. Incidentally, for the purpose of your rather convenient memory, you brought up Fox

          3. Like I said, a university study showed that the more you watch Fox Noise, the less you know.  Because they jive you on that show.  Don’t be taken in by them.  Fox is bot and paid for by Big Money that wants your vote so they can continue to rake in Big $$$ by polluting the planet with their oil, gas and coal.  

          4. A university study showed that Fox “News” viewers know less than people who watch no news at all.  And you can tell who watches Fox Noise.  They all come here with the same talking points.  So Fox viewers, come on at us.  So we can ID and then ignore you.  

      1. What does “left elite” mean to you anyway? That they’re educated? think openly? got all their teeth?  Do not follow with blind faith?  I’ve never quite understood the term…  clarify it for me ducky!

        1. Sherm Da Worm… The blind sided agenda driven group gathering intellectuals who correct policy with more policy.

           I’m not questioning their education or good hygiene, I just think it’s bothersome to roll many decent Republicans within the scope of the ones stated in the article above.   I believe the extremes on both sides of the aisle are in fact ultra bothersome, for that I should have clarified.

          Would you like for me to explain the divine right, or could I assume that one may not look for them at the dentist.

          1. “Extremes on both sides”???  Nothing is extreme here but the GOP.   Left-sided extreme would be an active Communist Party, Free National Health Care for every single citizen, castration for rapists, and food/housing guaranteed for every citizen.  

            You haven’t even begun to see the Left get extreme, so give me a big fat break.  

          2. If then our most liberal leaders aren’t the furtherest left then I hope America never lets the Left get extreme, you certainly had me moved with your words… I’ll stay a bit right of center, no break for you!!!

          3. Oh, no, fair’s fair, Duckman.  If Republicans get to be extreme, it’s the Democrats’ turn next.  Why should one party have all the fun?  

        2. “left elite”

          Thats a Gringrich catch phrase to be handed out in subliminal messages to the labotomized crowd to use to make them think that they can actually still think!

      1. Thank you for providing the world with insight into the “deepest thoughts” of the average conservative.  Folks like you create more and more open minded liberals every day. Thank you very much and please do keep up the good work.

  2. The way they chose to phrase it IS unusual. And you got to love it, never a mention about dems who are against abortion. As a dem I wouldn’t vote dem for 90% of the candidates out there.

  3. So, by contrast the Democrats are the party of unconstrained access to abortion, including late-term abortions? After all, some of them take that position, so it must be true of all of them.

    Or, could it be that the Republicans cited are damnfools, misquoted, or unwise in their choice of words as individuals (take your pick) and no wider lesson should be drawn from it?

    1. The column, and a lot of us, note the plurality or even majority of R Senate candidates to these extreme views apparently not held by the majority of R voters.  These views are also on the R Party planks.  Misrepresentation at best (and they’re supposed to be representative) and threatening at worst.  If they are “damnfools”, what Party wisely continues to nominate this ilk?

      1. “If they are “damnfools”, what Party wisely continues to nominate this ilk?”

        Almost, almost you convince me of the error of my ways… who could oppose a party like the Democrats’, which apparently numbers no damnfools amongst its congresscritters?

    2. The Dems didn’t pass a Party Platform standing for unconstrained access to abortion.  

      You Republicans DID pass a Party Platform standing for FORCING women to bear children.  The new GOP: the party of In-Your-Face government.  The stick-it-to-women party.  The Caveman Party.  The Taliban Party.  

      1. “You Republicans DID pass a Party Platform standing for FORCING women to bear children.”

        I must have missed that. Is there a Selective Service Impregnation Center here in Maine?

        1. CBS News online:  “Republicans Approve Platform with Strict anti-abortion
          language” 

          “The party platform states that ‘the unborn child has a fundamental individual right to life which cannot be infringed.’  …Cases of rape and incest or in which the mother’s life is in danger are not addressed in the platform, which implies there are no exceptions in those cases.”  

          http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57497592-503544/republicans-approve-platform-with-strict-anti-abortion-language/

  4. Apparently these mattes are not nearly as damaging as the liberals and their media would like them to be. Romney continues to rise in the polls and it is looking like the Democrats are a one issue party once again. These types of stories continue to make headlines while real news such as the President of the United States efforts to cover-up a terrorist attack in Libya, get no press.

    Everyone besides radical left wing liberals seem to understand that nobody is going to take away abortion rights or contraceptives.  We just had a Republican president with a Republican Congress and a right leaning Supreme Court and there was no attempt to take away any rights. Why would anyone think a moderate Republican president and Tea Party Republicans, most of whom are pro-choice, would waste time on this type of stuff?

    1. You voiced this “sit back and relax” view elsewhere. It does affect everyone since it’s a domestic issue, and a big one.  Your optimism on “no change” belies both the Republican planks and the stated missions of R&R.  Most TPers are pro-choice?  Data please.

      1. You do realize that Romney and most Republicans and Libertarians favor allowing states to make their own laws, right? From health care to education to abortion.  Even if Roe v. Wade were overturned, this wouldn’t outlaw abortion.  Do you think Mainers would embrace making it illegal to have an abortion?

        The Tea Party is, by definition, unconcerned with social issues. Our concern is with spending and entitlement reform, period. Anyone who claims to be a part of the Tea Party and says otherwise does not understand the Tea Party movement. 

        1. They began with a libertarian, federalist focus and no doubt, there is some libertarian influence still remaining. Though it was largely co-opted by the religious right, nativists and war mongerers.

          Will the tea party be backing Gary Johnson or Mitt Romney? Enough said.

        2. Does the TP endorse the entire R Platform?  What do they think of the uninformed foreign policies of R&R?

    2. Classic misdirection from the media. No question that a some republicans say some pretty thoughtless and uninformed things, (a kinder, more gentler way of saying stupid). Some democracts do as well, ie: “We have to pass the bill before we know what’s in it”. Not to mention, “I’ve been to all 57 states”

      1. “Some” Republicans?  The entire Party voted for a platform that would outlaw abortion in ALL cases: rape, incest, and life of the mother be darned.  

          1. You’re right, simple.  The majority of the Republican Party voted to kill women when their fetuses are threatening their lives.  

            The lesson is clear: women need to vote a straight democratic ticket until the Republicans straighten up. It’s only those men who dislike women, who should vote Republican. I guess that’s their right.

      2. The statement about passing a bill before “you” know what’s in it was made to a group of non-politicians before the ACA had been finalized. The group (“you”) was trying to debate the contents of a bill that was not yet completely written. They were told that they should wait until the bill had been finalized. Then they could discuss its merits while politicians were deciding whether or not to vote to pass it.

        Some Republicans like to pretend that politicians were told to vote on the bill before reading it. That is not the case. 

    3. So you’re saying don’t really pay any attention to what Romney/Ryan say..  um… then what parts are the parts to pay attention to ?

      1. How about what they do?  Romney was a total FAIL at creating jobs in Mass.  Only three other governors were worse than he was.  Romney passed so many “fees” on people in Mass. that they called him “FeeFee” Romney.  Romney was so hated by the people of Mass. that he didn’t even bother to run for a second term.  Romney told a Mormon woman that she needed to DIE sooner than have the abortion that would save her life.  

  5. This is horrifying. 

    I had an abortion after I was raped, and I cannot imagine the callousness that would compel a woman to carry to term that reminder of a traumatic event.

    Is “an exemption for the health of the mother” allowed to cover the very real question of suicide in the aftermath of violation?

    Walk a mile in her shoes, then we’ll talk.

    1. jaylynn, please tell all your friends to vote Obama/Biden!  Women are not understanding what it would mean if Romney stole this election — which he could do.  I’d bet my bank account that Romney would take us to war with Iran almost as soon as he got into office.  And he badgered a woman in his church to abort — even when the doctors told her she might die if she didn’t.  Even the Mormon Church told her she could abort — but Romney went to her parents to see if they’d force her to carry the fetus threatening to kill her.  

  6. Classic misdirection from the media. No question that a some republicans say some pretty thoughtless and uninformed things, (a kind way of saying stupid). Some democracts do as well, ie: “We have to pass the bill before we know what’s in it” Pelosi. Not to mention, “I’ve been to all 57 states” Obama.

    1. “Some” Republicans?  Read the latest Repuglican Party Platform?  They ALL want to kill women rather than let them abort.  They ALL want to force a woman to bear the child of her rapist — even if the rapist was her father or uncle.  

      What ever happened to the idea that it’s rapists who are the criminals, not the person raped?  

      If men were raped 1/10th as often as women are, rape would become a capital crime.  

      1. Rape SHOULD be a capital crime. But to  suggest that “All republicans want to kill women rather than allow them to  abort”, is contrary to reality. BOTH parties have “pro-life” and “pro-choice” believers in their ranks. 

        1. I hear you, really_simple.  Nevertheless, you are aligning yourself with a party that has made its *platform* one that condones the murder of women.  

          How can you support such a party?  By voting Republican, you are now voting for a woman-killing party.  Do I sound extreme?  Yes, I do!  But only because the Republican Party has morphed into something deadly, putrid and extreme.  It’s not me who is extreme.  It’s your Party.  Please don’t shoot the messenger.  

          1. Where on earth are you getting your information Jes? You’re making my point for me,there is no place for blind ideological extremism on either side. Sadly both parties succumb to the pressures of the extremes. 

          2. I didn’t callyou extreme Jes…..you did!  Please refer to second paragraph in your previous comment.

          3. On the contrary….scroll up to your reply two comments up Where you start out by saying “I hear you”.

  7. Walsh, a House incumbent in Illinois, asserted that “with modern technology and science, you can’t find one instance” where abortion is necessary to protect a woman’s life or health. “There is no such exception as life of the mother,” Walsh concluded. “And as far as health of the mother, same thing.”
    _______________

    So in other words these republicans value the life of the fetus over the life of the already living mother, whose life means nothing.

    In the world of Islam the man will choose the life of the baby as he believes he can always find a new wife.

      1. LOL….coming from a progressive big government control freak 

        the American Taliban is the alphabet soup of useless PROGRESSIVE government bureaucracies that continue to try and push their filthy tyrannical hands further down the collective pants of the sovereign Ameican individual

        take away your useless central government and people will be free to kill all the babies in the womb they please….folks will also be able to freely move away from the freaks who choose to do so as well….I’m all for it!

        1. Sorry, Jack.  It’s the Republicans who are the “big government control freaks.”   I’d like to see you raped and then be forced to carry your rapist’s picture around for the rest of your life, tatooed on your forehead along with the words “he raped me.” 

          Think about it, dude.  

  8. Since SCOTUS began in 1789, and has heard and decided on over 30,000 cases, only 10 cases in 223 years have been overturned. For the purpose of reducing that to a number, .00003 decisions have been reversed.  Those are pretty good odds that Roe will stay in tact, regardless of anyone’s view on the issue.

    The topic at hand should not be what the radical fringe elements LEFT or RIGHT are screaming about.  This election is about the economy and the future viablity of  America’s  standing with our allies and against our adversaries.

  9. Any woman who votes for Romney-Ryan either hates herself or hasn’t been paying attention.  {And I, by the way, am a woman}

  10. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO) — who came under fire after asserting that “legitimate rapes” don’t often result in pregnancy — was arrested multiple times in the 1980s for protesting outside of abortion clinics in St. Louis. Between 1985 and 1987, Akin worked with other anti-choice activists to physically block women’s access to reproductive health clinics in the city, during what RH Reality Check describes as a “hotbed of anti-choice violence and harassment” in St. Louis. At that time, Akin went by his given first name, William, rather than the middle name he currently uses.
    Another piece of sordid history from Akin’s life emerged late Thursday. The candidate apparently donated $200 to the campaign of designated “domestic terrorist” Tim Dreste, who was later convicted for threatening to kill or assault doctors who performed abortions.
    http://thinkprogress.org/health/2012/10/25/1091791/todd-akin-arrested-abortion-clinics/

      1. The republican party has morphed into a monster.  This is not your dad’s Republican Party.  That party is long gone.  What’s taken its place is diseased.  Please don’t vote for it.  

  11. Republicans want big government that makes the decisions that rightfully belong in the home, whether it be around abortion or end of life as in the Schiavo case. Individual liberties mean nothing to this American version of the Taliban.

    1. what about the individual liberties of an unborn baby with no voice to object to your advocation for its murder? 

      LIFE is the foundation of liberty….those who do not respect it, neither deserve nor will they obtain freedom and liberty

      1. When the Cold War ended, the Far Right had to find something else to scare with other than the Commie Scare.  So they picked gays and abortion.  The whole abortion issue is a political ruse to get your vote.  

    1. The Republican Party is being dragged into the dirt by extreme Christians like Todd Akin, Paul Ryan, Richard Mourdock and hundreds of others.  This has been getting worse for decades, now.  Like Islam, Christianity is a primitive desert religion that follows the God of Abraham.  You might not know it, but the Koran and the Bible are very similar: both have all the same stories: Jonah and the whale, Samson and Delilah, Noah, Jacob and his coat, etc., etc.  Allah and Jehovah are virtually the same god — the god of Abraham.  

      And like Muslims, these extreme Christians are out to drag women back into servility, by denying them rights over their own bodies.  As a woman, I’m not going to stand around and let that happen.  I don’t know if you’re a man or a woman, simple, but if you’re a woman, you shouldn’t either.  

    2. For Linda Bean Jones to compare Obama to Hitler is disgraceful. From now on I shop at Cabela’s. The quality of Cabela’s merchandise is higher than Bean’s anyway. 

  12. Maybe their positions are not too extreme. Human life begins at conception, when a 1 celled zygote forms, which is unique, different from the sperm and egg,  and sets into motion the development of that human being. Every, and I mean every legitimate textbook of biology and medicine confirms this. Check it out. (NAbortionRALProChoice and Planned Abortionhood’s websites don’t count as legitimate scientific sources). An abortion, at any stage after conception, ends that human’s life and is therefor murder.  All pro abortion rights arguments are hinged on denying this FACT.  Perhaps, these candidates positions reflect what most know but dare not stand up for. Or perhaps our society has become so self-centered that we willing kill more than a million Americans each year; 95+%  for the convenience of the parents; not for reasons of rape, incest, or the life or health of the mother. Some politicians use the tactic of endorsing those exceptions as a way to try to reduce the great majority of abortion, even if the public would not go along with an outright ban with the life of the mother exception only.

  13. Mr. Mourdock’s comments bring out a huge dilemma for religious people.  They believe in an omnipotent God who ultimately is responsible for the rape as well as the conception.  They believe that God has the power to change hearts.  So why does He not change the hearts of sinners, who are also His creatures and whom He loves, before they commit horrible acts against others whom He also loves? 

    It isn’t enough to talk of freewill.  God has known since Cain killed Abel that He created a flawed creature, but one that He can change.  Why does He not?

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