Todd Akin takes it back. He's not sorry. Two years after the Missouri Republican's comments on rape, pregnancy and abortion doomed his campaign and fueled a "war on women" message that carried Democrats to victory in the Senate, one of the few regrets he mentions in a new book is the decision to air a campaign ad apologizing for his remarks. "By asking the public at large for forgiveness," Akin writes, "I was validating the willful misinterpretation of what I had said."
Todd Akin is back talking about rape in his new book and Republicans have a message for him: Shut up. [...] "Todd Akin is an embarrassment to the Republican Party and the sole reason Claire McCaskill is still part of Harry Reid's majority," said Brian Walsh, who served as communications director for the National Republican Senatorial Committee during the 2012 cycle. "It's frankly pathetic that just like Sharron Angle and Christine O'Donnell in 2010, he refuses to take any responsibility for sticking his foot in his mouth, alienating voters and costing Republicans a critical Senate seat. Worse, he's now trying to make money off his defeat. The sooner he leaves the stage again the better."
"Todd Akin and his dangerous agenda for women were soundly rejected by voters in 2012, yet candidates like Thom Tillis, Cory Gardner and Greg Abbott continue to follow in his footsteps," said Dawn Laguens, Executive Vice President of Planned Parenthood Votes. "Todd Akin's appalling beliefs about women and rape were too extreme for America's women, and they represent policy positions shared by politicians like Cory Gardner, Thom Tillis and Greg Abbott -- among others. Just as Todd Akin was held accountable for his beliefs, these candidates will have to answer for their opposition to basic access to medical care for America's women, and especially their cold indifference to women who are survivors of rape and incest." While Todd Akin was best known for his comments about legitimate rape, he also supported a wide range of measures -- such as redefining rape, wanting to ban emergency contraception for survivors of rape and incest, and supporting measures that could interfere with personal, private, medical decisions relating to decisions about birth control, access to fertility treatment, management of a miscarriage, and access to safe and legal abortion -- that were far too extreme for the vast majority Americans. Similarly, Abbott, Tillis and Gardner have used their positions to do things such as prevent rape survivors from suing those who negligently hire their attackers, trying to deny rape survivors from accessing emergency contraception, and forcing survivors of rape and incest to undergo an invasive trans-vaginal ultrasound before accessing an abortion.