Kirsten Fleming

Kirsten Fleming

Opinion

Donald Trump makes his view on abortion clear for everyone in the US at Georgia town hall

Surprise!

Donald J. Trꦍump, one-time big-city D🌼emocrat, has come out as the social moderate he’s always been.

In a Fox News “town hall” that aired Wednesday morning, Trump sat down with Harris Faulkner and a group of friendly female voters in Georgia to help boost h🃏is appeal to the crucial demographic.

In a recent Fox News poll, Kam💙ala Harris is 10 points ahead o🌸f Trump among women.

Sure, he’s been cast by the left as a “Handmaid’s Tale” villain, but his positions on abortion — much to the chagrin of the Republican pro-life wing — are nuanced.

Former President Donald Trump held a town hall with women voters with Fox News host Harris Faulkner. Julia Beverly/Shutterstock
Trump addresses abortion and IVF in a Fox News town hall with women voters. Getty Images
Trump made his position clear for voters, and it’s more nuanced than Democrats make out. ERIK S LESSER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Audience members asked about border security, child care costs and reprodutive rights. Fox News

ꩲThe 45th president — who appointed three Supreme Court justices who voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, which sent the issue of abortion back to the states — said some state abortion bans are “too tough.” And that he supports exceptions for “rape, incest, lﷺife of the mother.”

In his own hyperbolic, Trumpian vernacular, he declared his unequivocal ꦏ🔯support for in-vitro fertilization, calling himself “the father of IVF.”

Trump defies easy characterization — remember he remade the Republican Party in his likeness (for better or for worse).

And it was important for him to at least answer these questions from real women. The GOP has struggled with its messaging in a post-Roe world, and it’s allowed the left to doggedly pursue female voters using fear-mongering messaging about reproductive rights — frequently twisting the truth.

Why else would Tim Walz lie and lie about him and his wife using IVF?

Kamala Harris is doing well with female voters and has been able to capitalize on the right’s lack of messaging in a post-Roe world. Gary C. Klein / USA TODAY💎 NETWORK via Imagn Images
Kamala Harris campaigning in Flint, Michigan, on October 4. REUTERS

The town hall also tackled other topics, like border safety, the economy a🔯nd child care costs. Because women aren’t just single-iss🐠ue voters who eat pro-abortion slogans for breakfast.

We care about the cost of housing and sky-high grocery bills. We worry we have so many unvetted illegal immigrants in the country, sucking away government resources and a sense of security and safety (even as ABC host Martha Raddatz pooh-poohs this concern). We worry that 🤡the left has allowed biological men into female space🧸s.

One woman asked Trump what he’d do about keeping trans athletes out of women’s sport♑s.

The Dems have been able to go on the offense about the Republican stance on IVF and abortion and have gained momentum from celebrities like Taylor Swift. Taylor Swift / Instagram

He said, “You just ban it,” which is a great sl♓ogan but hardly a viable path to a𝔍ction.

ꦦIt is, however, refreshing for a candidate to at least acknowled⭕ge that biological men do not belong in women’s sports.

Many on the left simply don’t have the cojones to take this obvious position and call out ꦚtruths that until maybe eight years ago would have been pretty banal.

It’s unclear if any of this will resonate outside the MAGA echo chamber. But at least it all ca🐭me straight from his mouth, not though a Dem messaging mach🐬ine.