Rep. Todd Akin, the Republican nominee for Senate in Missouri who is
running against Sen. Claire McCaskill, justified his opposition to
abortion rights even in case of rape with a claim that victims of
“legitimate rape” have unnamed biological defenses that prevent
pregnancy.
“First of all, from what I understand from doctors [pregnancy from rape] is really rare,” Akin told KTVI-TV in an interview posted Sunday. “If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”
Akin said that even in the worst-case scenario — when the supposed
natural protections against unwanted pregnancy fail — abortion should
still not be a legal option for the rape victim.
“Let’s assume that maybe that didn’t work, or something,” Akin said.
“I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be
on the rapist and not attacking the child.”
A 1996 study
by the American Journal of Obstetricians and Gynecologists found
“rape-related pregnancy occurs with significant frequency” and is “a
cause of many unwanted pregnancies” — an estimated “32,101 pregnancies
result from rape each year.”
In a tweet, McCaskill said she was “stunned” by Akin’s comments.
After the interview caused a firestorm, Akin said in a statement that he “misspoke.”
Akin is perhaps the boldest among a crop of conservative 2012 nominees who could hamper GOP efforts to take back the Senate in the fall. Akin has called for an end to the school-lunch program and a total ban on the morning-after pill.
His claim about “legitimate” types of rape is not completely foreign
to the current Republican Congress, however. In 2011, the House GOP was
forced to drop language from a bill that would have limited federal help
to pay for an abortion to only victims of “forcible rape.” Akin was a co-sponsor on the bill.
Nor is this Akin’s first time suggesting some types of rape are more
worthy of protections than others. As a state legislator, Akin voted in
1991 for an anti-marital-rape law, but only after questioning whether it
might be misused “in a real messy divorce as a tool and a legal weapon
to beat up on the husband,” according to a May 1 article that year in
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The PollTracker Average shows Akin leading McCaskill by a margin of 49.7 percent to 41.3 percent.
No comments:
Post a Comment