Todd Akin has until Tuesday at 5:00pm ET to drop the Republican Senate nomination he just skunked, and slowly back away. Right now, it seems the Republican Congressman from Missouri will stay in, as he told Mike Huckabee in a radio interview today, “I’m not a quitter…By the grace of God, we’re going to win this race.”
This sudden fortitude comes despite a contrary report from conservative blog RedState that his staff was making preparations for Akin’s departure from the race. Akin just tweeted out an appeal for campaign funds, so take that for what you will.
Still, I’d get it if Akin’s party suddenly transforms him into a “quitter” because, by the grace of God, he has uttered the stupidest thing a politician is likely to say all year. I don’t say that simply because I disagree with Akin’s views on abortion and rape. No, what he said was quite literally stupid, by the dictionary definition.
Evan McMorris-Santoro of Talking Points Memo was the first to flag Akin’s interview with KTVI-TV, the St. Louis Fox affiliate:
[Akin] 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 has made the customary attempt at an apology, claiming that he just “misspoke” and that his understanding of female anatomy might be a bit off. But his quitting might be the only way he saves what the Republicans considered a winnable race against Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill. The growing cacophony from the Right demanding his departure from the race continues, ranging from early-bird Senator Scott Brown, eager to keep fooling Massachusetts voters who don’t think he’s a conservative, to Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, to the more subtle Senator John Cornyn, who today recommended that Akin “should carefully consider what is best for him, his family, the Republican Party.” Karl Rove spoke more so with his actions, announcing plans to pull his Crossroads ads backing Akin out of Missouri. Even the Tea Party Express is calling for Akin to bounce. Presidential candidate Mitt Romney also chimed in (twice) with his condemnation.
Interesting that Republicans did not react in such panic mode after Akin, days after capturing the Missouri Senate nomination, called for the morning-after pill to be banned. Akin claimed emergency contraceptives are a form of abortion (it isn’t), and he doesn’t approve, since he believes all abortion should be banned.
He’s not alone in this opinion; new Romney running mate Paul Ryan, the guy who once said he’s “as pro-life as a person gets,” also doesn’t believe in any exceptions for abortion. Granted, Ryan hasn’t been stupid enough to use the phrase “legitimate rape” in public, but make no mistake: the only difference here is one of vocabulary. A reminder, from Romney’s hometown Boston Globe:
Last year, Ryan joined Akin as one of 227 co-sponsors of a bill that narrowed an exemption to the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federal funding for abortions. The Hyde Amendment allows federal dollars to be used for abortions in cases of rape and incest, but the proposed bill — authored by New Jersey Representative Christopher H. Smith — would have limited the incest exemption to minors and covered only victims of “forcible rape.”
House Republicans never defined what constituted “forcible rape” and what did not, but critics of the bill suggested the term could exclude women who are drugged and raped, mentally handicapped women who are coerced, and victims of statutory rape.








