Kamala Harris’s running mate, Tim Walz, voted against legislation mandating lifesaving care for babies who survive abortions in Congress and repealed legislation requiring such survivors to be reported in Minnesota. The Nebraska-born Democrat initially voted in favor of H.R.4712, the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, but wrote to then-Speaker Paul Ryan saying he had done so in error and requesting his vote be reversed.
On becoming Governor of Minnesota in 2019, he continued to pursue an anti-life agenda, repealing legislation mandating that reasonable measures be taken to “preserve the life and health” of children born alive after botched abortions. The omnibus bill containing the repeal measures also repealed requirements for abortionists to report cases in which infants survive abortion and whether those infants receive care, and the Positive Alternatives Act which provided support for mothers considering abortions.
Babies were recorded as having initially survived their abortions multiple times before Walz repealed the reporting requirements. Three were reported in 2019, although two were allowed to die, and the third received only “comfort care measures” rather than lifesaving treatment.
Some babies who survive their abortions have been saved by medical intervention. Melissa Ohden is one high-profile case, with a nurse finding her discarded in a bag of medical waste, making “weak cries and slight movements” following a botched abortion in Iowa in 1977.
In testimony to Congress, Ohden described how de facto “post-birth” abortions were the norm at the hospital where she was born, with it being common practice to “leave born alive infants like me to die in the utility closet.”
It’s true.
Tim Walz not only believes in abortion at all stages of a pregnancy, but even after birth.
Walz accidentally voted in favor of HR4712, which provided medical care to babies who survived abortion—but then REVERSED his vote.
Here is his PE that changed his vote: pic.twitter.com/oU2IvYxA0B
— Dustin Grage (@GrageDustin) September 11, 2024