Trump’s belief in his ability to mediate the abortion debate is delusional.
Trump’s Naïve Attempt to Compromise on Abortion
Former President Donald Trump apparently believes he can bring “peace” to the abortion debate by negotiating a compromise between the pro-life and pro-choice sides. He suggests finding an acceptable gestational timeframe after which abortions would be banned by federal law.
In an interview with NBC’s Kristen Welker, Trump stated that he would “come up with a number of weeks or months” that would “make people happy.” He even claimed that “92 percent of the Democrats don’t want to see abortion after a certain period of time.”
What nonsense. Has a single Democrat leader ever articulated the stage of pregnancy after which they would support an abortion ban? No, they haven’t. My colleague David Harsanyi rightly noted Monday that Democrats support zero limits on abortion, even up to the point of birth in some states, and “are also opposed to compelling doctors to provide infants who survive attempted abortions the minimum amount of care they would be expected to provide any other person.”
Earlier in the interview, Trump responded to a biased question from Welker about the medical necessity of abortion by stating, “The radical people on this are really the Democrats that say, after five months, six months, seven months, eight months, nine months, and even after birth you’re allowed to terminate the baby.”
As if on cue, Welker interjected, “Democrats are not saying that.” But of course they are. They say it all the time, mostly in how they vote on abortion legislation. Mollie Hemingway detailed a number of recent votes in which Democrats almost uniformly supported unrestricted abortion.
“Given a choice of whether to vote for or against legislation requiring states to permit the killing of unborn children up to the moment of birth,” wrote Hemingway, “nearly all elected Democrats vote enthusiastically for that.”
So much for Trump’s naïve (or perhaps insincere) claim that he can convince Democrats to abandon their position. No one, not even Trump, will ever be able to broker a compromise on abortion for the simple reason that Democrats will never accept a compromise if it means placing hard limits on the killing of the unborn. Abortion has become a sacrament of the left’s neo-pagan religion, and Democrats will defend it to the last.
But the exchange between Trump and Welker exposed something else besides Trump’s naiveté, which is his utterly transactional approach to the abortion debate. He won over pro-life Republicans in 2016 by promising to nominate originalist justices to the Supreme Court, which meant guaranteeing Roe’s eventual demise. Pro-lifers went along with it and supported Trump because it was their best shot at accomplishing the half-century goal of overturning Roe, something previous Republican leaders had failed to do — and often had not even tried to do.
For Trump’s part, he seems to think overturning Roe was enough and that aggressive efforts like those of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who signed a bill this year banning abortions after six weeks, are misguided. Trump called the Florida bill “a terrible thing and a terrible mistake,” and presumably thinks the same about similar abortion bans passed and signed into law in Texas, Georgia, and Tennessee.
Clearly, Trump has no philosophical or theological convictions about abortion. That was clear as far back as the 2016 GOP primary campaign when Trump, a lifelong pro-choice Democrat, suddenly became a pro-life Republican. So why did the pro-life movement support him? Because when you really believe, as pro-lifers do, that human lives are at stake, you’re willing to engage in nakedly transactional politics to save as many of those lives as possible. In this, the pro-life movement shares striking similarities with the abolitionist movement of the antebellum era, which was willing to accept compromises to limit the spread of what they sincerely believed to be the great moral evil of slavery.
But precisely because the pro-life movement, like the abolitionist movement, is motivated by moral convictions about the rights and dignity of the human person, there are limits to what can be achieved by compromise. Pro-lifers will never be at “peace” about abortion as long as it persists as a legal regime, however restricted it might be, just as abolitionists saw their compromises as part of a long-term strategy to eradicate slavery entirely.
Trump might think a 15-week ban, for example, would placate both sides, but the truth is that most pro-lifers would see it merely as a way station en route to a total or near-total ban, while pro-choice advocates would see it as an unacceptable stripping away of a woman’s “right” to terminate her pregnancy.
The truth is, the abortion debate in America will never end because each side represents a worldview that is fundamentally incompatible with the other. Either the unborn are human beings with the inalienable right to life, or they have no rights at all and can be terminated just as easily as black slaves were in the antebellum South. There isn’t really any middle ground here on which to forge a compromise.
Democrats sense this about the pro-life side, which is why they view with skepticism any Republican legislation proposing limits on abortion, fearing, as southern slaveowners once did, that any limits are the beginning of abortion’s eventual demise.
In a similar way, most pro-lifers understand that nearly every elected Democrat today believes that the vindication of the constitutional rights of one group of people, women, depends entirely on denying all constitutional rights of another group, the unborn. Democrats have long held such views about the Constitution and were willing to wage a war to defend them.
The pro-life movement, of course, does not have the same level of support within the Republican Party as the pro-choice movement has within the Democrat Party. The Republican establishment has always held its nose at the pro-life wing of the party and done the bare minimum to placate it. No wonder, then, that when Trump came along promising to deliver tangible results in exchange for pro-life support, the movement accepted the offer. Pro-lifers figured, correctly, that however much Trump might disappoint, he could not be more of a disappointment than the GOP had been for the last half-century.
The Welker-Trump interview at least makes all of this rather clear: There will be no compromise on abortion. As Abraham Lincoln famously said of slavery in his “House Divided” speech, so too we might say of abortion in our time: We will become all one thing or all the other.
The sooner Trump gets that through his head, the sooner he’ll clear his mind of cant about convincing Democrats to compromise — or casting aspersions on Republicans like DeSantis who make the least compromise possible to advance the cause of life.
Compromise solution
At any stage of pregnancy. These two positions cannot be reconciled through compromise because they are based on fundamentally different beliefs about the value and dignity of human life.
Trump’s attempt to negotiate a compromise on abortion is misguided for several reasons. First, his claim that Democrats would be willing to accept a gestational timeframe for abortions is simply untrue. Democrats have consistently supported unrestricted access to abortion, even in the later stages of pregnancy. This is evident in their voting record on abortion legislation and their opposition to efforts to provide care for infants who survive attempted abortions. The idea that Democrats would suddenly abandon their position and accept limitations on abortion is unrealistic and unsupported by any evidence.
Second, Trump’s transactional approach to the abortion debate raises concerns about his commitment to the pro-life movement. While he promised to nominate originalist justices to the Supreme Court, which was seen as a step towards overturning Roe v. Wade, he now seems dismissive of efforts to pass restrictive abortion laws. His criticism of the Florida bill and similar laws in other states suggests that he views overturning Roe as a sufficient accomplishment, without considering the moral and ethical implications of allowing abortions to continue in some circumstances.
Moreover, Trump’s history as a pro-choice Democrat raises questions about his true convictions on the issue of abortion. His sudden transformation into a pro-life Republican during the 2016 campaign suggests a strategic political move rather than a deeply held belief. This opportunistic approach undermines his credibility and raises doubts about his commitment to protecting the rights of the unborn.
In reality, the abortion debate in America is deeply polarized because it is not merely a political issue, but a moral and ethical one. Pro-lifers believe that every human life is valuable and deserving of protection from conception, while pro-choice advocates emphasize a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body. These opposing worldviews cannot be reconciled through compromise because they are rooted in fundamentally different understandings of the rights and dignity of the unborn.
While compromises can be made to limit the scope of abortion, such as implementing gestational timeframes, they will never satisfy both sides of the debate. Pro-lifers will continue to advocate for further restrictions and ultimately seek to end the practice of abortion entirely, while pro-choice advocates will resist any infringement on a woman’s right to make decisions about her own body. As long as these fundamental differences persist, the abortion debate will continue with no possibility of a
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