August 31, 2023 | Reading Time: 3 minutes

No, vulnerable Republicans are not pivoting to birth control

They can’t quit anti-abortion politics.

Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Source: Wikimedia Commons.

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Earlier this month, I said there are probably two things that we can count on. One is that the Republicans won’t stop trying to stop pregnant people from determining their own fates. The other is that the Republicans, knowing that anti-abortion politics is increasingly unpopular now that abortion is no longer a federal right, are going to keep trying to hide such efforts.

In mid-August, operatives in Ohio tried covering up their true intent – which was blocking a forthcoming ballot measure that would, if successful, enshrine abortion rights in that state’s constitution – with grotesque fearmongering about children getting sex-changes without their parents’ consent. They were hiding anti-abortion politics with anti-trans politics. Fortunately, Ohio voters saw through the charade.


Perhaps Republicans in swing districts can dodge the scrutiny of women and independents who want abortion rights restored, but can they also avoid the scrutiny of Republicans who have been conditioned to believe that promoting birth control is promoting sexual activity?


Hiding their intentions continues, with reporting from the Times showing that some Republicans are now talking up legislation that they say would expand access to birth control. The Times: “It is an increasingly common strategy among vulnerable House Republicans — especially those in politically competitive districts — who are trying to reconcile their party’s hard-line anti-abortion policies with the views of voters in their districts, particularly independents and women.”

And: “Appearing to embrace access to contraception has become an imperative for Republican candidates at all levels who are concerned that their party’s opposition to abortion rights has alienated women, particularly after the Supreme Court’s decision last year to overturn Roe v. Wade and the extreme abortion bans in GOP-led states.”

The newspaper quoted a Republican strategist who said this “pivot to birth control,” as the Times put it, was good politics. “Republicans have long said we need to find alternatives to abortion. This is one. There are a lot of Republicans who have longstanding records of promoting contraception. It’s a meaningful effort to engage women voters.”

I stress that sentence because it seems to distill one of the core problems. Anti-abortion politics isn’t about abortion only. It’s about regulating women’s bodies. So anti-abortion politics usually includes birth control in that, to many Republican voters, it’s the same as abortion, and should be regulated to an equally extreme degree. 

Here’s Lindsay Beyerstein in 2022: “Anti-choicers have been fighting to redefine contraceptives as abortion for years. They rallied behind pharmacists who put their religious beliefs ahead of their obligations when refusing to dispense Plan B. In 2014, the Supreme Court ruled that companies can deny employees comprehensive health care insurance based on their specious belief that birth control is abortion.”

Are there, in fact, a lot of Republicans who have longstanding records of promoting contraception? Maybe. But they don’t influence conservative Supreme Court justices the way that anti-abortion Republicans do. 


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Another problem facing vulnerable Republicans who wish to hide unpopular anti-abortion politics with popular policies that would ostensibly expand access to birth control is their party’s longstanding antipathy toward it. The GOP argument used to be that promoting access to birth control is promoting sexual activity, especially among teenagers, and that the government should not be involved in that.

What they meant, however, is that the government should not allow women to escape the consequences of sex – which is to say, getting pregnant. We know that that’s what they really meant, before the fall of Roe, because that’s what they are coming out and saying, now that Roe is gone. “Actions have consequences” is the new anti-abortion mantra. If you don’t want to face the consequences of sex, don’t have sex.

Perhaps Republicans in swing districts can dodge the scrutiny of women and independents who want abortion rights restored, but can they also avoid the scrutiny of Republicans who have been conditioned to believe that promoting birth control is promoting sexual activity?

The third problem is the legislation that the Republicans introduced last month calls for doing things that are already being done, and it calls for them in language that defeats the purpose of the legislation. It directs the FDA to provide guidance for two companies that make birth control pills and that want to sell them over the counter. But one is already authorized to do so. The other doesn’t need the guidance.

But it’s the legislation’s language that undermines the GOP’s need to hide anti-abortion politics. Per the Times, the provision comes this close to saying that birth control is the same as abortion. It suggests “that pregnancy begins at the point of fertilization rather than when a fertilized egg is implanted in the uterus. Oral contraception is defined in the bill as a drug that ‘is used to prevent fertilization.’”

The Republicans know that anti-abortion politics is unpopular. That’s why they keep trying to hide it, either with fearmongering about kids getting sex changes or with a phony pivots to birth control.

But they can’t quit it.


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John Stoehr is the editor of the Editorial Board. He writes the daily edition. Find him @johnastoehr.

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