The same extremists lining up to support a #federal #abortion #ban, that would override hard-earned reproductive freedoms in states like Ohio, are now tripping all over themselves to profess their support for #IVF and personal #choice.
Yeah right.
The truth is freedom-killing MAGA Republicans were caught off guard after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos (created and stored for in vitro fertilization) are children under state law.
Public reaction to the decision — that repeatedly invoked scripture as its legal foundation for effectively stopping in vitro fertilization treatments across Alabama — was highly negative.
Of course it was. Millions of Americans struggle with infertility issues. Many have turned to IVF for hope.
So the #patriarchal zealots on a mission from God to force their religious beliefs down our throats
— to control what you read, say, do, who you marry, when and how you have kids
— saw the polls on IVF and rushed to pretend they would absolutely protect access to it.
Don’t believe a word. The extreme agenda of #Christian #nationalists to inject government into our private lives and subjugate women as vessels of the state was bluntly exposed in the Alabama IVF case.
MAGA Republicans, inextricably linked to that extremism with their minority rule, panicked.
It’s an election year.
An urgent, if superficial, GOP course correction was hastily activated in MAGA circles to minimize political fallout in the wake of the IVF outrage.
It is “imperative that our candidates align with the public’s overwhelming support for IVF and fertility treatments,” warned the memo from the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
Every Republican running for the U.S. Senate in Ohio took heed and raced to cover their anti-choice backsides.
Every one of them affirmed their solidarity with those appalled over the Alabama ruling. Every one of them is a #fraud.
Just a few months ago, Frank LaRose, Bernie Moreno, and Matt Dolan aggressively opposed a statewide issue that established a constitutional right “to one’s own reproductive medical treatment,” including the freedom to make decisions on abortion, contraception, fertility treatments, continuing one’s own pregnancy and miscarriage care.
Frank #LaRose spearheaded the campaign against access to reproductive choices that encompassed IVF.
Multi-millionaire Bernie #Moreno fought reproductive freedoms with six-figure donations to anti-abortion groups mobilized to defeat the right of Ohioans to make their own reproductive decisions.
Matt #Dolan disparaged the constitutionally protected freedoms Ohio voters decisively approved last November as too extreme — and then disparaged voters as being too dim to really understand what they were voting for.
Heading into the March 19 GOP primary, all three Republicans say they’re open to canceling the will of state voters to impose federal restrictions on abortion rights and reproductive health care.
The day an Alabama court decreed frozen embryos “extrauterine children” and the legal equivalent of human beings in a wrongful death lawsuit, Moreno suggested that his religious certainties about embryonic personhood were in sync with the court’s.
“Your faith teaches you that life begins at conception,” he said, which would seem to preclude access to IVF services.
LaRose echoed similar beliefs about life starting at fertilization that concurred with the religious views that influenced the all-Republican Alabama Supreme Court in finding that fertilized eggs have the same legal status as people — which prompted an immediate pause in IVF treatment at hospitals and fertility clinics in the state.
It’s not the first or last time the religious (not scientific) concept of fetal personhood justified banning abortion from the moment of conception or ending popular fertility treatments for would-be parents.
There is a right wing through line from the theocratic justices on U.S. Supreme Court, who overturned Roe and punted on prenatal personhood, to the scripture-quoting state supreme court justices in Alabama, who granted legal status to frozen embryos, and the uptick in fetal personhood bills introduced in scores of Republican-dominated legislatures in the country.
https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2024/02/27/national-and-ohio-republicans-desperately-pretending-they-havent-been-attacking-ivf/