Nunn: Potential Child Needs To Be Considered In Rape, Incest Situations

By Nikoel Hytrek

November 6, 2022

Congressional candidate Zach Nunn is back to suggesting there should be restrictions on women seeking abortion in the cases of rape and incest.

In an interview on Tuesday on Today With Caleb, a podcast hosted by Caleb Primrose, a conservative activist in West Des Moines, Nunn said the potential child needed to be considered in such situations.

“In the extremely rare situation of rape or incest, we want to be able to have a conversation in consultation with the doctor there, but we need to remember this is not just a conversation between a woman and her doctor. This is also a conversation about the future of that child, and that needs to be taken into consideration,” Nunn said. “So let’s provide some clear guidelines.”

Nunn was talking about the bill he voted for that had Iowa ban abortion after 20 weeks with only exceptions for the life of the mother, not rape or incest.

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Repeatedly, Nunn said the question of abortion restrictions should be left up to voters in each state, not the federal government. So, women could have the right to bodily autonomy in one state but not another.

“Let’s give this back to Iowans and find rational places for this,” he said Tuesday. “I would fight against Democrats or Republicans who try to overreach at the federal level.”

Nunn, a Republican, is running against Incumbent Democrat Cindy Axne to represent Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District.

Since June, voters have repeatedly made clear they support legal abortion access and rejected attempts to restrict it. In Iowa, 61% of respondents in a recent Des Moines Register poll said abortion should be legal in all or most cases. Prior to that poll, the number was consistently around 60%.

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Yet Nunn has long supported restricting abortion.

In 2017, he voted to ban abortion after 20 weeks. He also voted for the bill to ban abortion after electrical activity is detected in the embryo—usually around six weeks, and commonly mislabeled as a heartbeat. He voted for the amendment to repeal the Constitutional right to abortion in Iowa and for the 24-hour waiting period.

The six-week ban, often referred to by antiabortion politicians as a “heartbeat bill,” does have exceptions for rape and incest, but both must be reported within 45 days for rape and 140 days for incest. The majority of those crimes aren’t reported.

In May of this year, Nunn raised his hand when debate moderator Dave Price asked which Republican candidates supported banning abortion without any exceptions.

He’s since tried to walk that back. In an August editorial published by the Des Moines Register, Nunn said he recognized medical emergencies happen.

“That is why the heartbeat bill I supported in the Legislature contained specific exceptions for horrific circumstances like rape, incest and fetal abnormalities, and to save the life of the mother,” he wrote.

But in his interview this past week, his comments suggest there should at the very least be extra hoops to jump through for rape and incest situations.

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Life of the mother exceptions are also less straightforward than they sound. Since Roe v Wade was overturned in June, multiple stories have come out about how sick women have gotten before they were allowed to have abortions to save their lives.

In September, Nunn released an ad saying he supported “common sense” limits to abortion, but only listed life of the mother. In an October debate with Axne, Nunn said, “I am pro-life. I support the mother and the baby.” He repeated that Iowa voters should get to decide.

On Tuesday, Nunn said, “And then we don’t want to see situations where we’re putting my wife, you know, our sisters, our brothers in a situation where they would have to make those hard choices and end one life to try and save another.”

He did not clarify whose decision it was.

“This shouldn’t be a decision that states get to make; this is a decision that women get to make,” Axne said during the October debate. “I’m saying this is women’s decision. This doesn’t belong in the state legislature here in Iowa. We need to trust women on this issue.”

 

Nikoel Hytrek
11/6/22

Have a story idea or something I should know? Email me at [email protected]. You can also DM me on Twitter at @n_hytrek

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  • Nikoel Hytrek

    Nikoel Hytrek is Iowa Starting Line’s longest-serving reporter. She covers LGBTQ issues, abortion rights and all topics of interest to Iowans. Her biggest goal is to help connect the dots between policy and people’s real lives. If you have story ideas or tips, send them over to [email protected].

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