Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on Tuesday morning introduced the Protecting Pain-Capable Unborn Children from Late-Term Abortions Act. The bill would ban abortions nationwide after 15 weeks of pregnancy. It would also let states tack on further restrictions as they see fit, including total prohibitions.
Graham said he intends for the bill to serve as a touchstone the Republican Party can rally around ahead of the midterms. In practice, it’s far more likely that his bill will instead be a lightning rod for Democrats to draw even more abortion-rights voters to the polls.
Though the GOP has long pledged to overturn constitutional protections for abortion, that promise’s becoming reality has left the party reeling and unsure of its next steps. As NBC News reported Tuesday, Republicans across the country are trying to blunt the damage the Dobbs ruling has inflicted on their chances to retake Congress this fall. And the polling that even GOP firms have conducted back up the concerns that abortion as an issue will dim Republicans’ prospects in November:
By 51% to 32%, battleground state voters say Republicans are more extreme on abortion than Democrats, according to polling exclusively provided to NBC News by WPA Intelligence, a GOP political consulting firm. The poll showed 41% of likely voters surveyed said the Dobbs decision, which did away with constitutional protections for abortion, made them more likely to vote for a Democrat; 24% said it made them more likely to back Republicans. Asked which group they identified with in the abortion debate, 54% said “Pro Choice,” compared to 39% who identified as “Pro Life.” The findings are consistent with those of another recent survey shared with NBC News, conducted by the firm OnMessage Inc., which consults for Senate Republicans. It suggests “Pro Choice” voters outnumbered “Pro Life” voters by a similar margin of 17 percentage points, triple what it was before the Supreme Court’s ruling.
No wonder many Republicans would prefer to talk about anything else. Some GOP candidates have backtracked on their calls for a total ban — Arizona Senate candidate Blake Masters went as far as to scrub his campaign website of his support for a “federal personhood law.” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., downplayed the odds that a national ban on abortion would become a reality any time soon at an appearance in June.
No wonder many Republicans would prefer to talk about anything else.
Graham’s bill is even more baffling when you consider that it doesn’t go nearly as far as Republican legislators in many states — including Graham’s own, albeit unsuccessfully — have pushed in outlawing abortions. It also doesn’t go as far as the bill backed by the House Republican Study Committee, the caucus’s conservative policy shop. Its proposed 2023 budget would support a so-called heartbeat bill, which would outlaw abortions just six weeks after conception.
Graham has tried to explain that this new “compromise” bill — which is stricter than a proposed 20-week ban that he has introduced repeatedly and uses the completely nonmedical term “late term abortion” — is needed only because of Democratic messaging around codifying Roe’s protections in law. But within hours of his announcement, Republicans and other conservatives were already distancing themselves from his proposal.








