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Melania Trump says she supports abortion rights in her new memoir
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Melania Trump says she supports abortion rights in her new memoir

CHICAGO (AP) — Melania Trump announced her support for abortion rights Thursday ahead of the release of her upcoming memoir, revealing a stark contrast to her husbandRepublican presidential candidate Donald Trumpto the decisive election issue.

In a video In a post Thursday morning on her I struggled to find a consistent message on abortion during sandwiched in between Abortion opponents within his base and the majority of Americans who support abortion rights.

“Individual freedom is a fundamental principle that I protect,” Melania Trump said in the video. “There is no doubt that there is no room for compromise when it comes to this fundamental right that all women have from birth: individual freedom. What does “my body, my choice” really mean?”

The video appears to confirm excerpts from her self-titled memoir reported from The Guardian on Wednesday.

Melania Trump has rarely publicly expressed her personal political views and has been largely absent from the campaign. But in her memoir, due to be published next Tuesday, she argues that the decision to terminate a pregnancy should be left to the woman and her doctor, “free from any interference or pressure from the government,” according to published excerpts emerges.

“Why should anyone other than the woman herself have the power to decide what she does with her own body?” she wrote, according to The Guardian. “A woman’s fundamental right to individual freedom and her own life gives her the power to terminate her pregnancy if she wishes.”

Melania Trump writes that she “carried this belief with me throughout my adult life.”

These views stand in stark contrast to the Republicans’ anti-abortion platform and to Donald Trump, who has repeatedly taken credit for appointing the three Supreme Court justices who helped overturn Roe v. Wade, who bragged about returning the abortion issue to the states. Democrats blame the former president for the severe deterioration of reproductive rights as abortion bans were implemented across much of the country after overturning the landmark case that had granted a constitutional right to abortion.

Donald Trump said Thursday that he spoke to his wife about the book and told her to “go with her heart.”

“We talked about it. And I said, you have to write what you believe. I’m not going to tell you what to do. “You have to write what you believe in,” he told Fox News, adding: “There are some people who are very, very right-wing on this issue, that is, without exception, and then there are other people who are somewhat see differently.” That.”

Vice President Kamala Harris The campaign highlighted Trump’s role in ending Roe v. Wade in a statement responding to Melania Trump’s defense of abortion rights.

“Unfortunately for women across America, Ms. Trump’s husband strongly disagrees and is the reason more than one in three American women live under a Trump abortion ban that threatens their health, their freedom and their lives,” Harris said Campaign spokesman Sarafina Chitika said in a statement. “Donald Trump has made it clear: If he wins in November, he will ban abortions nationwide, penalize women and restrict women’s access to reproductive health care.”

Donald Trump on Tuesday said he would veto it a federal ban on abortion, the first time he has explicitly said so since before refuses to answer questions on the subject. But abortion rights advocates are skeptical and say Trump cannot be trusted not to restrict reproductive rights.

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Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Action Fund, said the memoir is another example of “the Trumps playing voters like a fiddle.”

“As president, (Trump) has made it his mission to overturn Roe v. Wade,” she said in a statement. “Melania stood by him and never once publicly distanced herself from his actions until weeks before an election where our boards will be back on the ballot and they will lose voters because of this matter. Read between the lines.”

Democratic strategist Brittany Crampsie called the release of the memoir a “clear attempt to appeal to more moderate voters and moderate JD Vance’s clearly extreme views on the issue.” But she was skeptical that the move would work in Trump’s favor, saying his changing views had “already confused voters and sowed distrust.”

Melania Trump also defends abortions later in pregnancy, claiming that “most abortions in later stages of pregnancy were the result of severe fetal abnormalities that would likely have resulted in the death or stillbirth of the child. Perhaps even the death of the mother.”

“These cases were extremely rare and typically occurred after multiple consultations between the woman and her doctor,” she writes.

These views seem at odds with those of her husband, who frequently parrots misinformation about abortion later in pregnancy and falsely claims that Democrats support “post-birth” abortion, even though infanticide is illegal in every state.

National abortion group SBA Pro-Life America condemned the former first lady’s views on abortion, including her comments about abortion later in pregnancy, but said her “priority is defeating Kamala Harris.”

“Women with unplanned pregnancies are crying out for more resources, not more abortions,” the organization’s president, Marjorie Dannenfelser, said in a statement. “We must have compassion for them and the babies in the womb who suffer brutal abortions.”

Mary Ruth Ziegler, a law professor at the University of California Davis School of Law who focuses on reproductive rights and history, said it was unclear whether publishing the memoir so close to the election was an attempt to help Donald Trump. However, she noted that Melania Trump and Trump’s split on the issue is not historically uncommon.

There is “a pretty long history of first ladies being more supportive of abortion rights than their husbands,” Ziegler said, including Betty Ford, a vocal abortion rights supporter and wife of former President Gerald Ford.

Donald Trump promoted his wife’s book a September rally in New Yorkand urged supporters to “go and get their book.” It is unclear whether the former president has read the book.

“Go out and buy it,” he told the crowd. “It’s great. And if she says bad things about me, I’ll call you all and say, ‘Don’t buy it.'”

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The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to improve its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. Learn more about AP’s Democracy Initiative Here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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