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Pete Buttigieg

Pete Buttigieg faces backlash for endorsing abortion up to birth

Icon of a computer screen with a play buttonMedia·By Kristi Burton Brown

Pete Buttigieg faces backlash for endorsing abortion up to birth

Less than a week after telling Democrats for Life’s Kristen Day that pro-lifers are not welcomed in his party, former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg appeared on “The View,” where he indicated his support for late-term abortion.

Co-host Meghan McCain asked Buttigieg where he would draw the line on late-term abortion. Buttigieg replied, “My point is that it shouldn’t be up to a government official to draw the line. It should be up to the woman who’s confronted with the choice.”

McCain then asked Buttigieg what he thought of infanticide — when a child’s life is ended outside the womb just after birth. “What if a woman wanted to invoke infanticide after a baby was born — you’d be comfortable with that?” she asked.

Buttigieg answered, “We’re talking about families that may have picked out a name — may be assembling a crib — and they learn something excruciating and are faced with this terrible choice — and I don’t know what to tell them morally about what they should do. I just know that I trust her and her decision medically or morally isn’t going to be any better because the government is commanding her to do it in a certain way.”

Thumbnail for Pete Buttigieg Explains Why He’s Pro-Choice | The View

 

Despite Buttigieg’s suggestion that women seeking abortions late in pregnancy do so largely for reasons of medical necessity, this is not the case. As previously noted by Live Action News’ Carole Novielli:

According to the Charlotte Lozier Institute, “a study of late-term abortions in 2013 (Fisher, Kimport) in the journal Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, a publication of the pro-choice Guttmacher Institute, the authors acknowledge that ‘data suggests that most women seeking later terminations are not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly or life endangerment.'”

Some expressed their outrage over Buttigieg’s apparent refusal to support laws against infanticide, late-term abortion, or partial-birth abortion — all of which are committed after viability, when children can survive outside the womb.

Live Action president Lila Rose reacted to the interaction on Twitter:

… as did Students for Life of America president Kristan Hawkins:

Meghan McCain explained her belief that Buttigieg’s positions on late-term abortion and infanticide are too radical for many women in America, and women responded in agreement.

this shouldn't be a difficult question for you to answer, @PeteButtigieg. @MeghanMcCain is right. You're extremely radical on late-term abortion & infanticide. This will hurt your campaign.

SBA Pro-Life America
SBA Pro-Life America
@sbaprolife

Fact-checking @PeteButtigieg on late-term abortion: In interview w/ @MeghanMcCain, Buttigieg claimed late-term abortions only happen when "woman gets the most devastating news" about a problem with the pregnancy or health of her unborn child. But what does the research say? 1/7

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As March for Life president Jeanne Mancini pointed out, Buttigieg’s view is not in sync with the restrictions the vast majority of Americans believe should be placed on abortion.

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