In his futile attempt to defend his proposal for a national abortion ban after 15 weeks of pregnancy, which would supersede liberal states’ abortion freedoms but allow right-wing restrictions to stay in effect, Sen. Lindsey Graham took an odd dig at Iran.
The South Carolina Republican, a longtime war hawk, is ever eager to paint Iran as an illiberal hellscape. But his comparison Tuesday was particularly rich.
“There is a consensus view by the most prominent pro-life groups in America that this is where America should be at the federal level,” Graham said of his proposed abortion ban during a news conference. “I don’t think this is going to hurt us. I think it will more likely hurt [Democrats] when they try to explain to some reasonable person why it’s OK to be more like Iran and less like France on abortion.”
The problem there is that the Iranian government’s stance on abortion mirrors many Republicans’ view on the procedure, despite Graham’s effort to otherize the Middle Eastern country. Iran’s government ushered in a host of abortion restrictions just last year that effectively ban all abortions except in cases in which the mother’s health is endangered. But even that determination is largely left to a panel of health care bureaucrats. And the potential punishment for undergoing an unauthorized abortion could be as severe as death. Needless to say, the law has earned international condemnation.
Here’s part of a statement the United Nations released calling Iran’s laws “a huge blow to women’s human rights and gender equality”:








