Ever since Herschel Walker announced his candidacy for the Senate last year, his campaign has been a fascinating sociological experiment in what happens when a politician’s stated policy positions are constantly contradicted by his actions.
This week, we found out that Walker, who has labeled abortion “murder” and called for bans on the procedure without exceptions for rape, incest or the life of the mother, may not be so wedded to that position. According to the Daily Beast, in 2009 Walker sent a check and a “get well” card to a woman who had aborted his unborn child. (Full disclosure: I am a contributing writer to the Daily Beast’s opinion page.)
Walker denied the story, threatened to sue the news outlet for defamation, and said he didn’t even know the woman’s identity — only for the Daily Beast to further report that the former girlfriend is also the mother of one of Walker’s children.
Few Republicans, who generally wear their anti-abortion position on their sleeves, have expressed any doubts about backing Walker.
Walker getting caught in a lie is about as unusual as a day that ends in “y.” After all, this is the same candidate who once inveighed against absent fathers — before it was revealed that he’s fathered four children with four women. But what is most revealing is that these latest allegations haven’t dented Walker’s support among conservative, nominally “pro-life” voters. Their nonchalant reactions exposed the lies and contradictions at the heart of the anti-abortion movement.
Few Republicans, who generally wear their anti-abortion position on their sleeves, have expressed any doubts about backing Walker. Instead, they’ve offered him unconditional support. “Republicans stand with him,” said Florida Sen. Rick Scott, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
A prominent Georgia pastor, Anthony George, who hosted the candidate at his church this week, told Politico for a piece on the lack of outrage from conservative Christians that “any Christian who engages in the political process … you’re always going to be confronted with someone that is either less than ideal, or something that flat-out contradicts what you believe in.”
“Less than ideal?”
Anti-abortion advocates regularly label abortion as “murder.” By that logic, Herschel Walker is a “murderer.” Indeed, Texas Republicans, for example, passed legislation that allows individual citizens to sue anyone who aids and abets an abortion after six weeks. One imagines that Walker’s behavior qualifies.
In the same Politico piece, Ralph Reed, founder of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, predicted that Walker’s consistent outreach to evangelicals is now going to pay a lot of dividends. One might expect evangelicals to be more upset at Walker’s alleged lies and misdeeds — and on an issue that has animated Republican politics for decades. But considering self-identified evangelicals were among Donald “Access Hollywood tape” Trump’s most loyal supporters, the only real surprise would be if they mustered even a scintilla of outrage over Walker’s hypocrisy.
The muted response from some of the country’s most virulent critics of abortion is an instructive reminder that for many conservatives — particular conservative politicians — opposition to abortion has little to do with morality, and everything to do with politics.
This disconnect between supposedly diehard opposition to abortion and the erratic commitment to that opposition has been on prominent display since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
Indeed, conservative commentator Dana Loesch summed up best the rank hypocrisy of the anti-abortion movement. Calling Walker’s former girlfriend a “skank” she said, “I don’t care if Herschel Walker paid to abort endangered baby eagles. I want control of the Senate.”









