When President Joe Biden signed the Respect for Marriage Act into law on December 13, 2022, Donald Trump hosted a party at Mar-a-Lago. Ecstatic guests crowded into the ballroom, dancing to “YMCA” and celebrating what they viewed as a cultural shift that could also transform the Republican party. Trump addressed the crowd. “We are fighting for the gay community, and we are fighting and fighting hard,” he told them. “With the help of many of the people here tonight in recent years, our movement has taken incredible strides, the strides you’ve made here is incredible.” Few conservatives remarked upon how the former president (and 2024 presidential candidate) referred to the LGBT movement as “our movement.” But it is notable — as is the fact that Trump’s LGBT activism has been accompanied by a pivot away from the pro-life movement.
It began with the midterms. After the GOP took a shellacking, Trump—who endorsed a number of unsuccessful candidates—needed a narrative that excused his performance. Thus, he adopted the mainstream narrative that Dobbs hurt Republicans, insisting that it wasn’t his fault that the red wave had been a trickle. “It was the ‘abortion issue,’” he said, “poorly handled by many Republicans, especially those that firmly insisted on no exceptions, even in the case of rape, incest, or life of the mother, that lost large numbers of voters.”
Instead of acknowledging the post-Dobbs work that pro-lifers continue to do across the country, Trump went on to complain that “people that pushed so hard, for decades, against abortion, got their wish from the US supreme court and just plain disappeared, not to be seen again.” Pro-lifers pushed back. They pointed out that Georgia governor Brian Kemp won re-election by 8 points after signing a 6-week abortion ban in a state Trump lost, that Ohio governor Mike DeWine won by 25 points after signing a 6-week ban in a state Trump won by only 8 points, and that Iowa governor Kim Reynolds won by 19 points as opposed to Trump’s 8 after signing similar legislation.
Trump has adopted the progressive narrative on abortion. According to Rolling Stone and other publications, Trump is backing away as pro-life leaders ask him for commitments, telling them that the pro-life issue is “losing big” and that their talking points need to focus on exceptions. Sources say Trump has been telling those around him that Republicans are “getting killed on abortion,” which is why he has focused on his past pro-life record with religious leaders while declining to commit to any future agenda. As one leader told Rolling Stone: “[Is Trump] going to try to make us swallow getting next to nothing in return for our support?”
The Trump campaign announced this week that it opposes any federal role in regulating abortion and that the issue should be decided by the states. The leaders of the most influential pro-life groups have condemned the announcement. The Susan B. Anthony List stated that “We will oppose any presidential candidate who refuses to embrace at a minimum a 15-week national standard” and called Trump’s position “unacceptable.” Lila Rose of Live Action stated that Trump had “disqualified” himself from the nomination. Kristan Hawkins of Students for Life of America concurred.
It isn’t just abortion, either. Thanks to conservative boycotting, Anheuser-Busch has lost more than $5 billion in market value since putting the face of trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney on its Bud Light cans to commemorate his “365 Days of Girlhood.” The company has been panicking, releasing statements that have done nothing to satisfy their irate customers. But on his podcast, Donald Trump Jr. told conservatives to stop “dunking” on the beer company—because they give some GOP politicians donations. Many pundits swiftly pointed out that the Trumps were folding to corporate pressure.
Of course, the Trump family has long supported many aspects of the LGBT agenda. Donald Trump was the first GOP presidential candidate to wave a Pride flag from a campaign stage. Donald Jr. has called himself “fairly liberal” on the transgender issue. The Kushners famously squared off with the socially conservative members of the Trump administration over issues like Planned Parenthood funding. Trump’s own pro-life conversion may be genuine—several pro-life leaders who have spoken to him about the issue assure me that it is—but it appears, based on his recent statements, that he is willing to sideline the pro-life cause for political gain. It bears mentioning that Trump’s pro-life accomplishments, while certainly championed by him, were largely the work of others, such as Vice President Mike Pence. The Trumps themselves are fair-weather social conservatives.
Many pro-life Republicans have successfully run on pro-life platforms. When Republicans govern well and represent their positions effectively, pro-life policies do not hurt electoral chances. Conversely, Trump’s determination to use the national stage to air his grievances, both real and imagined, have consistently produced pitiful results. Trump, who is constitutionally incapable of taking responsibility for his bad decisions, would like to blame the pro-life movement for his own failure to lead the Republican party to victory. If he wants to see the real problem with the GOP brand, he may want to look in the mirror rather than blaming social conservatives.
Original story on First Things.
You’re just now figuring this out?
Who cares what Lila Rose and Kristan [sic] Hawkins or the Susan B. Anthony List’s sinecures think about Trump? They should put up their own preferred candidate who will lose precisely because he espouses a 15-week national standard as a minimum. Abortion a state issue. What about federalism and the Constitution do these people not understand?
Should slavery be a state issue?
Ms. Rose and Ms. Hawkins are right. Mr. Trump was my last choice for president, as he was significantly better than Ms. Clinton or our abortion extremist Catholic president. There are several good prolife, pro-family, pro-faith, pro-freedom candidates (on the Republican side only, unfortunately). Yet, I fear there may be so many running that voters will split between several of them and Mr. Trump will, once again, get the nomination. I am not a “never Trumper,” but I hope I’m not forced to settle for my last choice again in 2024. Pray for all of our political candidates and officials.
Trump’s mentor was Roy Cohn.
If you don’t “get” the significance,
then you don’t get it at all.
Wow! What a great article! It has been obvious for many years that Donald J Trump is a chameleon: he changes his political stances to benefit himself. The only principle that matters to him is: make me rich. Mike Pence – now there’s a man who knows his principles and is not afraid to stand up for them! Plus – Pence is a former Catholic – at least he knows something about our religion.
Melania Trump is a Catholic. So you’d rather have a non-Catholic president than a president married to a Catholic? She is a good influence on Trump!
Can Melania be a Catholic? Univision reports: “But, Michael Wildes, an immigration attorney who worked for the Trump Organization, told Univision’s investigative unit that she obtained a green card four years earlier in 2001, “based on marriage.” Melania and Donald Trump were not married until Jan. 22, 2005 at Bethesda-by-the Sea Episcopal Church in Palm Beach, Florida.”, and she married a multiply divorced Christian.
How exactly is SBA’s proposed law allowing abortion up to 15 weeks of pregnancy more pro-life than leaving it up to the states? Last year the Dobb’s decision was hailed as a great development. I wish that the Supreme Court had ruled that the unborn were persons under the 14th amendment, but they didn’t.
I definitely wish that Trump was not pro LGBTQ.
I think we would do well to concentrate on Biden and his administration’s militant pro-abortion promotion.
If it’s any consolation, LGBTQ people do not consider Trump to be pro-LGBTQ.
I do feel sorry for gay and lesbian people. Especially the way people look past their humanity and make gross generalizations about them:
https://azcapitoltimes.com/news/2021/11/04/lgbt-and-conservative-youre-not-alone/
I think it’s to do with some people’s militant centric-ness: Trans-centric, Gay-centric, Bi-centric, Drag-centric, Straight-centric, Race-centric, etc., etc. This self-absorption in society today is unprecedented and repugnant. If we continue to focus on ourselves and our own tribes to the extent that hatred for “the other” takes over, then we separate ourselves from the body of Christ.
Nobody should be pro-LGBTQ.
Is anyone pro-cancer?