On Monday night, the public got its first look at Justice Samuel Alito’s draft ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which left little doubt that the Supreme Court’s Republican-appointed justices would soon overturn Roe v. Wade. On Tuesday morning, the National Republican Senatorial Committee distributed talking points to the party’s incumbents and candidates.
Given the party’s decades-long campaign to uproot Americans’ reproductive rights, it was tempting to think the NRSC’s talking points would be celebratory. They were not. On the contrary, the Republicans’ message and tone was inherently defensive, in recognition of the simple fact that most of the country wants the Roe v. Wade precedent to be left intact.
It’s why the National Republican Senatorial Committee advised incumbents and candidates to tell voters, among other things, “Republicans DO NOT want to throw doctors and women in jail.”
The point was hardly subtle: Democrats will eagerly paint Republicans as extremists who will push radical prosecutorial ideas, which is why it’s important for GOP incumbents and candidates to reassure the electorate that the party’s goals are reasonable and mainstream.
It would be an important point — if it were true.
But it’s not. Politico reported today, for example, that Republicans in state legislatures have “already enacted mandatory minimum sentences that would go into effect if Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion is handed down.” Those policies include the prospect of felony charges against physicians.
Related measures that would open the door to prosecuting women are advancing right now. The New York Times reported this morning:








