Meet the Conservative Outsider Who Wants to Bring Common Sense Back to His...
How This Small-Town Police Force Became a 'Criminal Organization'
Iranian Regime's Latest Move Shows How Desperate It Has Become
House Republicans Want to Know Why Ilhan Omar's Income Jumped by 140 Times...
UN Report Says One of the Deadliest Threats to US National Security Is...
If 'The Only Thing More Powerful Than Hate Is Love' Democrats Missed the...
Elites Did Their Part to Fight Global Warming by Flying Dozens of Private...
Historic: U.S. Marks Ninth Month With Zero Releases at the Border
'Brass-Knuckled Hypocrisy:' Even the Washington Post Is Slamming Virginia Democrats' Redis...
This Viral Super Bowl Halftime Story About Bad Bunny's Grammy Was Completely False
John Kasich Called Bad Bunny's Show a Celebration of Latino Culture. Did He...
Senator Eric Schmitt Goes Nuclear on Dems Over ICE Funding, Immigration, and the...
Critics Blast Katie Porter's Pre Super Bowl X Post As She Tries to...
Here Is the Real Reason Bad Bunny Is Anti-American
We Didn't Think Progressives Could Make LA Any Worse, but They Can
Tipsheet

2020 Dem: Paying for Abortions Is the Same as Funding Our Troops

AP Photo/Steven Senne

Abortion rights advocates are furious with former Vice President Joe Biden for flip flopping on the Hyde Amendment, which bans taxpayer funding of abortions. At the beginning of May, he told an ACLU activist that yes, he would abolish the law. But on Tuesday he said he actually still supports it.

Advertisement

That opinion doesn't fit in with the progressive wing of the party, so fellow presidential candidates like Seth Moulton are wishing Biden "would change his position." 

"I think it's wrong," Moulton said during a CNN interview on Thursday. "It disproportionately attacks women who don't have the private means to afford an abortion."

He then made an interesting - no, egregious - comparison.

"It's sort of like saying, 'I support the troops, but I don't want to pay them.'"

Hm. Not quite.

Moulton insisted the analogy is a sound one and that if Biden supports a woman's "right to choose," he should support federal funding for it.

Other 2020 candidates couldn't agree more. While he didn't make quite such an outlandish analogy as Moulton, Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) too used the talking point this week that Hyde is an attack on poor and minority women.

Advertisement

Related:

2020 ELECTION

The Hyde Amendment is "discrimination," Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) adds.

Most of the country, however, disagrees.

"A poll of likely voters conducted for Politico and Harvard’s school of public health found that in October 2016 voters opposed Medicaid funding of abortion by a 22-point margin (58 percent to 36 percent)," National Review recently reminded us.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement