Rep. Todd Akin, R.-Mo., blew up his Senate campaign by claiming that female victims of “legitimate rape” seldom become pregnant, which isn’t true. Akin’s remark was traceable to a long-discredited 1972 study that’s acquired peculiar currency among male social conservatives. Akin’s remark was later half-endorsed by Rep. Phil Gingrey, R.-Ga. (who, weirdly, is an actual ob-gyn).
Indiana Republican Senate candidate Richard Mourdock, taking a somewhat different tack, stated that “even if life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that is something that God intended to happen.” Pennsylvania Republican Senate candidate Tom Smith breezily compared impregnated rape victims to unwed mothers. Like Akin, Mourdock and Smith lost. At a January 2013 retreat, Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway had a simple message for House Republicans: Don’t talk about rape.
A child who puts a hand on a hot burner instantly learns never to do it again. Even laboratory rats are capable of learning from negative reinforcement. But some Republican members of Congress apparently can’t. The proof was the June 12 comment by Rep. Trent Franks, R.-Ariz., that “the incidence of rape resulting in pregnancy are [sic] very low,” which of course caused an instant and predictable furor.
It’s possible that Franks didn’t mean to compare, as Akin did, the percentage of rapes resulting in pregnancy to the percentage of consensual intercourse resulting in pregnancy. Jonathan Chait of New York magazine and David Weigel of Slate, two skeptical connoisseurs of right-wing nonsense, absolve Franks of pulling an Akin. What Franks meant, they argue, is that the total number of pregnancies resulting from rape is comparatively low simply because the incidence of rape– compared to the incidence of consensual sex–is very low. Franks’s remarks were sufficiently inarticulate that this may indeed be what he meant to say (as opposed to what he actually did say). But if Franks did mean that–in the larger scheme of things–the number of pregnancies resulting from rape is trivial, he’s wrong about that, too. In fact, pregnancies from rape number about 30,000 per year–hardly a rounding error.
Franks was defending a bill banning abortions after 20 weeks that cleared the House Judiciary committee—one that makes no exceptions for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest. Republican-controlled state legislatures have also been passing a lot of bills lately that restrict abortions, even though about 63% of all Americans pretty consistently support Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that established a woman’s right to abortion. Why are Republicans so determined to undermine Roe, even to the point of enacting state laws that could never pass constitutional muster unless Roe were reversed?
Related: Paul Ryan compares anti-abortion fight to battle to end slavery









