| |
US
Senate
candidate
under
wraps
after
rape
remarks
By JIM
SALTER
Associated
Press
ST.
LOUIS -
Missouri
Rep.
Todd
Akin
kept a
low
profile
Monday,
a day
after
saying
women's
bodies
are able
to
prevent
pregnancies
in "a
legitimate
rape"
situation
and that
conception
is rare
in such
cases.
At least
two
Senate
Republicans
urged
him to
abandon
the
race.
The
congressman
had no
public
appearances
scheduled
Monday,
and did
not plan
any
further
comments
on the
issue,
according
to a
campaign
spokesman.
Akin
canceled
a Monday
morning
interview
on St.
Louis
radio
station
KMOX.
The
six-term
representative
is the
GOP
nominee
for the
Senate
seat
held by
Democratic
incumbent
Claire
McCaskill.
Asked in
an
interview
Sunday
on KTVI-TV
if he
would
support
abortions
for
women
who have
been
raped,
Akin
said:
"It
seems to
me,
first of
all,
from
what I
understand
from
doctors,
that's
really
rare. If
it's a
legitimate
rape,
the
female
body has
ways to
try to
shut
that
whole
thing
down."
Later
Sunday,
Akin
released
a
statement
saying
that he
"misspoke"
during
the
interview,
though
the
statement
did not
say
specifically
which
points
were in
error.
"In
reviewing
my
off-the-cuff
remarks,
it's
clear
that I
misspoke
in this
interview,
and it
does not
reflect
the deep
empathy
I hold
for the
thousands
of women
who are
raped
and
abused
every
year,"
Akin's
statement
said.
Akin
also
said he
believes
"deeply
in the
protection
of all
life"
and does
"not
believe
that
harming
another
innocent
victim
is the
right
course
of
action."
The
backlash
against
Akin's
comments
brought
some
calls
for him
to get
out of
the
Senate
race,
including
from
Sen.
Scott
Brown of
Massachusetts,
considered
to be
one of
the most
vulnerable
Senate
Republicans
in the
November
election.
"As a
husband
and
father
of two
young
women, I
found
Todd
Akin's
comments
about
women
and rape
outrageous,
inappropriate
and
wrong,"
said
Brown,
who is
locked
in a
tight
race
with
Elizabeth
Warren.
"There
is no
place in
our
public
discourse
for this
type of
offensive
thinking."
Brown
said
Akin
should
apologize
and
resign
the
Senate
nomination.
Sen. Ron
Johnson,
a
Wisconsin
Republican,
said in
a tweet
that
Akin
"should
step
aside
today
for the
good of
the
nation."
Akin's
comments
also
brought
a swift
rebuke
from the
campaign
of
presumptive
GOP
presidential
nominee
Mitt
Romney
and his
running
mate,
Rep.
Paul
Ryan of
Wisconsin.
Romney
and Ryan
"disagree
with Mr.
Akin's
statement,
and a
Romney-Ryan
administration
would
not
oppose
abortion
in
instances
of
rape,"
Romney
spokeswoman
Amanda
Henneberg
said.
Romney
went
further
in an
interview
with
National
Review
Online,
calling
Akin's
comment
"insulting,
inexcusable
and
frankly
wrong."
"Like
millions
of other
Americans,
we found
them to
be
offensive,"
Romney
said.
In an
emailed
statement
Sunday,
McCaskill
said it
was
"beyond
comprehension
that
someone
can be
so
ignorant
about
the
emotional
and
physical
trauma
brought
on by
rape."
This
month,
the
65-year-old
congressman
won the
state's
Republican
Senate
primary
by a
comfortable
margin.
During
the
primary
campaign,
Akin
enhanced
his
standing
with TV
ads in
which
former
Arkansas
governor
and
presidential
candidate
Mike
Huckabee
praised
him as
"a
courageous
conservative"
and "a
Bible-based
Christian"
who
"supports
traditional
marriage"
and
"defends
the
unborn."
Ushering
Akin
from the
race is
complicated
by the
fact
that he
has
never
been a
candidate
beholden
to the
party
establishment.
Since
being
elected
to
Congress
in 2000,
Akin has
relied
on a
grassroots
network
of
supporters.
His
Senate
campaign
is being
run by
his son.
Behind
the
scenes,
Republican
officials
were
looking
for
intermediaries
trusted
by Akin
to try
to coax
him from
the
race.
Missouri
election
law
allows
candidates
to
withdraw
11 weeks
before
Election
Day.
That
means
the
deadline
to exit
the Nov.
6
election
would be
5 p.m.
Tuesday.
Otherwise,
candidates
would
need a
court
order to
withdraw.
If Akin
were to
leave,
state
law
holds
that the
Republican
state
committee
has two
weeks to
name a
replacement.
The
candidate
would be
required
to file
within
28 days
of
Akin's
exit.
Akin, a
former
state
lawmaker
who was
first
elected
to the
House in
2000,
also has
a
long-established
base
among
evangelical
Christians
and was
endorsed
in the
primary
by more
than 100
pastors. |