Akin in race to stay, makes first appearance since rape remark
U.S. Rep. Todd Akin appears at a news conference where he confirmed his plans to remain in Missouri’s U.S. Senate race despite a political uproar over remarks he made about rape and pregnancy. Photo by The Associated Press.
Friday, August 24, 2012
CHESTERFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Bolstered by thousands of small individual donations, embattled Republican Congressman Todd Akin reaffirmed his commitment to his U.S. Senate campaign Friday while re-emerging publicly in Missouri for the time since making inflammatory remarks about rape and pregnancy.
Akin held a brief, tightly controlled news conference in the St. Louis suburb of Chesterfield after returning from Florida where he had been meeting with leading conservatives as he seeks to revive his campaign against Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill. His staff limited reporters to five questions and, as he has done repeatedly in recent days, Akin again rejected calls from top Republicans to drop out of the race.
“Apparently there are some people who are having trouble understanding our message, and I’d like to be clear on that today,” Akin said. “We’re going to be here through the November election, and we’re going to be here to win.”
After winning the GOP primary in August, Akin had gained quick backing from national Republican and
conservative groups focused on ousting McCaskill. But that support withered after Akin was asked in an interview that aired Sunday on a St. Louis television station whether his general opposition to abortion extended to women who have been raped.
“From what I understand from doctors, that’s really rare,” Akin said of a woman becoming pregnant from rape. “If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”
Akin did not specifically address those remarks in Friday’s news conference, nor was he asked about them. Instead, he sought to shift the attention back to his campaign against McCaskill, saying he stood for more freedom, more jobs and less bureaucracy than the incumbent Democrat. Staff members said Akin would resume normal campaigning next week, though they did not give specifics.
During the past week, Akin has apologized repeatedly on national radio and TV shows while acknowledging his original remarks were wrong. He’s also run a 30-second apology ad on TV stations across the state.
But he remained largely out of sight in Missouri until Friday. He went to Ohio to film his apology ad at the office of his media strategist. Then he went to Florida, where he met with fellow conservatives who had gathered before the Republican National Convention.
Missouri State University communication professor Elizabeth Dudash said Akin could re-start his campaign by appearing before relatively friendly audiences.
“If he just hides in the bunker,” she said, “there’s no way you’re going to win.”
The chairman of the Republican National Committee had urged Akin to quit the Senate race, as did presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, his vice presidential pick Paul Ryan and every living Republican who has represented Missouri in the Senate. Akin also has lost the financial support for the political arm of Senate Republicans and of some powerful interest groups, such as the Crossroads organization that is affiliated with Republican strategist Karl Rove.
“I may not be the favorite candidate of some people within the Republican establishment,” Akin said during the news conference. “But the voters made a decision and this is an election, it’s not a selection.”
Akin also sent out a new fundraising plea Friday with a goal of increasing online contributions to $212,000 by the end of the day. It referenced his continued backing from former Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, the most prominent public figure to stand by Akin’s side.
“Your recent support gave me the courage I needed to fight on, thank you for standing with me, and supporting my campaign to defeat Claire McCaskill,” Akin said in the fundraising message.


Comments
seeno 9 months, 3 weeks ago
Same comment on this as my comment on Opinion: Defiant Akin fractures GOP unity.
dandych 9 months, 3 weeks ago
I am certain Claire will appreciate his plans to stay.
rebel999 9 months, 3 weeks ago
The bottom line is that Romney, Ryan and the Republican party believe that women should not under any circumstances be allowed to have an abortion. This Republican point of view will be written into the Republican platform at the Republican convention and this no more abortion law will become the law of the land if Romney, Ryan and the Republicans win control of our government in the next election or any election thereafter. Women of America, do you want to go back to the days of not being able to end a pregnancy you don’t want? Perhaps many of you women don’t remember those days. Perhaps many of you women don’t remember the days of having to put your life on the line to get an abortion by some inexperienced person in some unhealthy backroom somewhere as you fear arrest for what you are doing. Perhaps you women AND men don’t remember how it was to have your economic well being and your freedom taken away because you are forced to raise a family that you can’t afford or want or wasn’t ready for. Perhaps many of you don’t know that many of you will be forced to give up your dreams for your life because you are going to vote for Romney and the Republicans who are going to pass laws that will outlaw abortions that will make you give up your dreams, your future, your life. This election is about more than just the weekly job numbers which by the way the Republicans in Congress and the rich and the Republicans in the private sector have done all that they could to weaken by their actions. This election is about fairness, equality; ending injustice; rights of many kinds; a right to an abortion; equal pay for equal work; getting some kind of gun control; getting an unbiased Supreme Court; an end to the Bush tax cuts for the rich and an end to voodoonomics; getting Obama’s budget that raises taxes on the rich and cuts the budget in a fairer way; stopping Romney/ Ryan’s plan which is to extend the Bush tax cuts for the rich and unnecessarily increase the military budget while also enacting the Ryan budget plan; getting laws and regulations that protect our environment; regulating Wall Street and stopping rich people’s con games; making the American dream available to all and not just the rich and much much more. That’s why we need to vote for President Obama and the Democrats because if Romney and the Republicans take over our government we will be SORRY!!!
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