Senator J.D. Vance, an Ohio Republican, was confronted by CNN host Jake Tapper on Sunday over Republicans’ push to block birth control.
With the Supreme Court‘s Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision that overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 in which it ruled there is no constitutional right to an abortion, returning the issue to the state level, questions concerning access to contraceptives in the United States have increased. In some corners of the right, a push to block birth control can already be seen. In Iowa, the state attorney general’s office announced in April that it would suspend payments for emergency contraception for survivors of sexual assault. The medication had been funded through a program for crime victims, but the Republican attorney general is considering a permanent end to its provision.
Vance maintained his anti-abortion stance in an interview on Sunday with Tapper during a discussion about the medical procedure when he was asked about how voters may not trust Republicans when it comes to women’s reproductive rights.
While referencing the recent Texas Supreme Court case in which a woman’s abortion was temporarily blocked, Tapper asked, “Isn’t that situation an example of why many voters might not trust Republicans?”
“I think we have to win the trust back of the American people, and one of the ways to do that is to be the truly pro-family party,” Vance said.
Tapper then asked: “Is birth control part of that policy, empowering women to be able to make those decisions before they get pregnant?”
“I don’t think that I know any Republican, at least not a Republican with a brain that’s trying to take those rights away from people, but I think it goes deeper than that,” Vance replied.
However, Tapper interrupted by stating he could provide a list of Republicans that are. In response, Vance said, “Well, okay,” while insisting he did not talk to those Republicans.
Newsweek has reached out to Vance via email for comment.
Vance’s comments come after Ohio became the seventh state in which voters decided to protect abortion access in November. Statewide initiatives in California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont have either affirmed abortion access or rejected attempts to undermine the right.
Ohio’s…
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