Evasive Action Can Trump Really Have It Both Ways On Abortion?
The Guardian Weekly|December 08, 2023
A few months ago, the former president Donald Trump accused the Republican party of speaking "very inarticulately" on abortion.
Carter Sherman
Evasive Action Can Trump Really Have It Both Ways On Abortion?

And yet, for the GOP presidential frontrunner, inarticulateness seems to be a feature, not a bug, of his own approach to abortion.

Trump thinks he can run in 2024 as a "moderate" on abortion, Rolling Stone reported last week - even though he's currently running ads in Iowa, a crucial state in the Republican primary, proclaiming himself "the most pro-life president ever". It's a title to which Trump has a legitimate claim: his three nominees to the Supreme Court not only handed the nation's highest court a definitive conservative majority, but all three voted to overturn Roe v Wade in summer last year.

While Republicans have flailed over how to message on abortion, Trump has - in typical Trump fashion - flip-flopped on it with apparent ease. He has refused to say whether he supports a federal ban and called the decision by Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor, to sign a six-week abortion ban a "terrible thing".

But all the while, Trump continues to take credit for overturning Roe.

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