A Brief History of “Post-Birth Abortion”
Happy Monduesday, Meteor readers, Some of you are lamenting the end of summer, but me? I am already knitting Christmas sweaters for myself and my child. I hope your entry to fall is smoother than the foam on a white woman’s pumpkin-spiced latte. In today’s newsletter, we discuss the importance of words and their meanings in conversations about abortion. Plus, more from Project 2025 and an unexpected “counterfeit” endorsement for Kamala Harris. Ho, ho, how long are these sweaters going to take, Shannon Melero WHAT’S GOING ONAnti-abortion glossary: Has the term “post-birth abortion” been cropping up a lot lately on your right-wing uncle’s Facebook posts? It’s been in circulation for years, but the fabricated idea it refers to—that Democrats are passing legislation that allows for abortion even past the moment of delivery—was rejuvenated when Trump mentioned it at a Michigan rally last week. “The real radicals on [abortion] are the Democrats where you can have an abortion in the ninth month,” he said. “And in six states, you’re allowed to kill the baby after the baby is born. And you know, one of those states is Minnesota, where this Tampon Tim comes from.” Trump’s fear-mongering was then parrotted by one of his advisors the next day. To be clear, this charge is absolutely false. It is illegal to kill a living child in all 50 states, and it’s sad that we even have to repeat that. But where did the term “post-birth abortion” come from, and how did it get so popular? As writer Jessica Valenti, founder of Abortion, Every Day, explains in a new Meteor series called Anti-Abortion Glossary, Republicans started tossing the idea around after a disastrous radio interview with former Virginia governor Ralph Northam in 2019. Northam had been asked a hypothetical question about whether or not a woman could abort a pregnancy up to the point of labor, and he responded by offering another (all too real) hypothetical: a child born with extreme “deformities” or prematurely who is unable to survive on their own. In that case, parents would have to decide whether to subject a fatally ill newborn to painful, invasive surgeries or to let them die of natural causes. It’s a nightmare situation, and for some parents, it’s a lived experience. But for GOP pundits, it was political fodder. At the time, Republicans were looking to sink an abortion bill that had just been introduced in Virginia, amending the state’s laws on late-term abortion. Republicans said the bill would legalize infanticide and, especially after Northam’s interview, painted him and other pro-abortion Democrats as “baby killers.” They ground the bill to a halt, turned Northam into a widely shared meme, and made the ridiculous notion of legal infanticide so popular with their base that Ron DeSantis and two women running for office in North Dakota used it. Political doublespeak? No—because “post-birth abortion” exploits the real experiences of the most vulnerable parents and infants for political gain. If the GOP wanted to earnestly talk about what’s killing children in America, perhaps they should look to their gun closets. New episodes of Anti-Abortion Glossary—aimed at dispelling the “infodemic” of abortion disinformation out there right now—coming to you weekly. Watch here: AND:
ZAKIA AND HER TRAINER CELEBRATING THEIR BRONZE MEDAL WIN. (VIA GETTY IMAGES)
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