Over the past two years, several states have enacted legislation
intended to punish criminal violence against pregnant women, and to
provide legal protection for women who defend their unborn children
against such attacks. Abortion-rights activists, however, claim
that the laws — based on
model legislation proposed by Americans United for Life —
would actually authorize violence against abortion
providers.
Mother Jones promoted that distortion today in an
article by Nick Baumann and Daniel Schulman with the
misleading headline: “Revealed:
The Group Behind the Bills that Could Legalize Killing Abortion
Providers.” The article offers a conspiratorial take
on the Pregnant Woman’s Protection Act, saying the laws are
“part of a campaign orchestrated” by AUL (which, in fact, has been
very public about its advocacy).
“Research shows that pregnant women are more likely to be
victims of domestic abuse,” said
Denise Burke, AUL’s vice president of legal affairs. “It is
tragic that the pro-abortion lobby maligns efforts to protect these
women.”
In a statement, Burke cited statistics about violence toward
pregnant women, including a 1998 study that found “pregnant women
are 60.6 percent more likely to be beaten than women who are not
pregnant.” Burke said “a pregnant woman is more likely to be a
victim of homicide than to die of any other cause. And case after
case has demonstrated that husbands or boyfriends are often the
perpetrators of pregnancy-associated violence and that this
violence is often directed at the unborn child or intended to end
or jeopardize the pregnancy.”
The Mother Jones article claiming the AUL model
legislation targeted abortionists was promoted at Huffington Post,
and Burke said: “Pro-abortion groups and their allies in the media,
including Mother Jones and the Huffington Post, appeared to have
intentionally distorted their reporting … in an attempt to
further their own political agendas. Their actions are not only
dishonest, but they do a grave disservice to the hundreds of
thousands of pregnant woman who are assaulted or killed every year
in this country.”