Donald Trump was never the first choice of committed social conservatives, whose organizations largely lined up behind Ted Cruz late in the Republican primary. Those groups raced to distance themselves from Trump after he went off-message by suggesting that women who have abortions would be punished if the procedure were banned, followed by hasty announcements of two additional positions.
But now that Trump is the only Republican running for president, he has begun to speak the right’s language on abortion, and some social conservative groups are sounding their approval. Crucially for them, last week, Trump hired as policy director John Mashburn, a man hailed by the head of a prominent anti-abortion group as “an excellent hire, especially for the pro-life movement and our legislative priorities.”
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With Mashburn, an attorney who most recently worked as chief of staff for North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis, Trump has brought into the fold someone social conservatives trust. “He is a rock solid pro-lifer and former Helms staffer. Someone we can work with,” Penny Nance, president and CEO of Concerned Women for America, told The Washington Examiner. She was referring to the late North Carolina senator Jesse Helms, whose anti-abortion legacy lives on in the Helms Amendment, an ongoing ban on U.S. foreign aid going to abortion services.
While working for Helms in the late 1980s, Mashburn made his name on a different issue that fell under the banner of the culture wars: The fight against the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA) for funding “blasphemous” work involving Christianity and sexuality — especially gay men’s sexuality. According to the book Righteous Warrior: Jesse Helms and the Rise of Modern Conservatism, Mashburn was the one who brought the notorious “Piss Christ” work by Andres Serrano to his boss’s attention. Helms ran with it, beginning a long crusade against public funding for the arts.
According to Righteous Warrior, after Mashburn discovered the work of photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, Helms declared, “Pictures of male genitals placed on a table is not art, except perhaps to homosexuals who are trying force their way into undeserved respectability.” The pressure worked. In 1989, after the NEA withdrew funding for an exhibition about AIDS, Mashburn told The New York Times, “Senator Helms said he was much more pleased by this than he was by the N.E.A.’s reaction under the former acting chairman to the Mapplethorpe exhibition.”
Mashburn went on to work for a series of prominent Republicans on Capitol Hill, including then-Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott and then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay. He also served as the executive vice president of the conservative American Civil Rights Union (ACRU, not to be confused with the American Civil Liberties Union) and as executive director of a related group, The Carleson Center for Public Policy. The latter organization is named for former Reagan official Robert Carleson, whose widow, Susan, is chair of the ACRU. Notably, Susan Carleson endorsed Ted Cruz, and the ACRU, which cannot directly endorse candidates, ran several blog posts condemning Trump for displaying “a clownish … disregard for the law” in claiming Cruz was ineligible to run for president. The ACRU did not respond to requests for comment on its former vice president’s new role with Trump.
Mashburn’s fingerprints may already be visible on the Trump campaign, though an effort to interview him went unanswered. On Fox News Tuesday night, Trump sounded an unusually measured note when answering a viewer-submitted question about how he would “protect the sanctity of human life.”
Trump replied directly: “I will protect it and the biggest way you can protect it is through the Supreme Court and putting people in the court,” he said. When Bill O’Reilly asked Trump if that meant he would appoint judges who would overturn Roe v. Wade, Trump was surprisingly measured, saying “as many as five judges” could be appointed by the next president, and adding of his theoretical picks, “They will be pro-life and we will see what about overturning.”
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Republican nominees have tended to stop just short of spelling out that they want to appoint judges to overturn Roe. To do so would give Democrats a clear rallying point, undermine talking points about activist judges, and interfere with the mainstream anti-abortion strategy that abortion rights should be chipped away incrementally. In 2012, Romney said, “I hope to appoint justices for the Supreme Court that will follow the law and the Constitution. And it would be my preference that they reverse Roe v. Wade.” McCain talked about overturning the opinion but said he would impose no litmus test. George W. Bush, too, talked about no “litmus test,” but ultimately appointed two stalwart opponents of abortion to the court, Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito.









