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Republican U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde has made his new stance on abortion public: He supports exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the mother, and thinks voters should decide the issue.
U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde's comment appeared to be a shift from his 2012 campaign, when he said he was "totally opposed to abortion."
“Eric Hovde should stay out of my personal life,” Baldwin shot back. “And I think I speak for most Wisconsin women that he should stay out of all of our personal lives.” If elected, Hovde would be one of the richest members of the Senate based on his campaign finance report, which showed he has assets worth between about $195 million ...
Hovde made his position clear when asked by PolitiFact Wisconsin to respond to a radio ad that targeted his stances on abortion, based on comments he made while running for the same office in 2012 ...
The earliest citation for an abortion-specific sense of the term is a 1971 reference in the Los Angeles Times to "pro-life, anti-abortion educational programs". [2] The adjective pro-life seems to derive from earlier constructions involving the word life used by opponents of legal abortion, particularly the phrase "right to life".
More: On abortion, Eric Hovde says he backs 'a right to make a choice' early in pregnancy. ... "In no manner did Eric Hovde suggest that elderly people should not vote. He was referring to ...
South Africa: A 2003 Human Sciences Research Council study examined moral attitudes among South Africans: 56% said they believed that abortion is wrong even if there is a strong chance of serious defect in the fetus, while 70% said they believed that abortion is wrong if done primarily because the parents have low income and may be unable to afford another child.
Incumbent Democratic Senator Tammy Baldwin won re-election to a third term, [1] narrowly defeating Republican nominee Eric Hovde. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump carried the state on the same ballot.