The Romney campaign is opening up about its new ad aimed at reassuring women voters that his policies on abortion and contraception would not be as extreme as they’ve been led to believe. Romney strategists tell the New York Times their goal is to keep President Obama’s lead among women in the low single digits. They decided to release the new commercial this week in hopes it will have maximum impact with late-deciding voters.
The ad seeks to make Mr. Romney’s stated position on abortion rights sound moderate. “In fact, he [Romney] thinks abortion should be an option in cases of rape, incest or to save a mother’s life,” says the ad’s star, Romney campaign volunteer Sara Minto of Ohio.
Romney’s record on abortion is a long and winding road.
William Saletan from Slate mapped the whole thing with a pretty definitive history back in August. This year, Mr. Romney’s campaign has said the candidate believes abortion should be banned except in cases of rape or incest or if it’s needed to save a woman’s life, though as recently as last month, Mr. Romney himself put forth a slightly different position which his campaign later clarified. But one thing Mitt Romney has been very clear about this election year is that he wants to see Roe v. Wade overturned.
Michelle Goldberg argues at the Daily Beast that Romney’s commitment to ending Roe explains why anti-abortion conservatives haven’t gotten their hackles up over the campaign’s more moderate tone on abortion and contraceptives this week. “[S]ocial conservatives are willing to tolerate their candidate’s current feint toward the center … because the possibility of finally getting rid of Roe is so tantalizingly close,” she writes.
The New York Times editorial board sees the potential overturn of Roe v. Wade as a real enough possibility that it took time to ponder a post-Roe America on Tuesday.








