WSJ What’s News - Why Isn't Anyone Talking About Republicans’ Historic Shift on Abortion?
Episode Date: July 17, 2024P.M. Edition for July 17. Republicans are moving away from abortion politics. WSJ’s Luke Vargas reports from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on what is behind the shift. And Democrat...ic leaders push to delay President Biden’s nomination as more lawmakers call on him to step aside. Plus, WSJ’s Arian Campo-Flores explains why aging migrants in the U.S. are paying taxes but not receiving retirement benefits. Sabrina Siddiqui hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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A top Democrat says President Biden should step aside
while party leaders push to delay his nomination.
And in the days before this week's convention,
Republicans made a historic shift on an issue that's long been core to their platform, abortion.
So why isn't anyone talking about it?
Plus, many migrants who pay taxes are hitting retirement age without benefits.
For those who are undocumented, it can sometimes look pretty grim.
For one thing, they've often worked in pretty low-paying jobs, and so it's much harder for
them to accumulate any savings. What that leaves many of them is a situation in which they basically
have to continue working until their bodies give out. It's Wednesday, June 17th. I'm Sabrina
Siddiqui for The Wall Street Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and
business stories that move the world today.
The calls for President Biden to step aside are growing.
Congressman Adam Schiff, a prominent antagonist of Donald Trump, said Biden should end his reelection campaign to make way for another candidate.
Schiff, the 19th House Democrat to say so, said he has serious concerns about whether Biden can win in November.
said he has serious concerns about whether Biden can win in November.
Schiff, who is currently running for Senate in California, is one of the most high-profile Democrats to make such a call since Biden's debate performance last month kicked off a
sense of panic within the party over his capabilities and age. Democratic leaders
are also increasingly concerned. People familiar with the matter say Senate Majority Leader Chuck
Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries both pushed for Democratic officials to delay their efforts to formally
nominate Biden. Party officials were initially set to prepare for a nomination vote that could
have come as early as next week, a process many rank-and-file Democrats felt was overly rushed.
Democratic Party officials are now saying they will hold off until next month before calling a vote.
Party officials are now saying they will hold off until next month before calling a vote.
Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheadle is being summoned to publicly testify before Congress next week about the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump. The Republican-led House
Oversight Committee has issued a subpoena to Cheadle, along with a letter in which Committee
Chairman James Comer said Americans aren't getting accountability and transparency from the Secret Service about security failures that allowed a
gunman to fire shots at Trump during a rally on Saturday in Pennsylvania. Comer also questioned
Cheadle's ability to lead the agency. The congressional hearing is currently scheduled
for the morning of July 22nd. This week, The Wall Street Journal is reporting on the Republican National Convention
from Milwaukee. We've been bringing you some of the team's coverage with our own Luke Vargas on
the ground there, relaying the big topics being discussed. But today, he tells us about something
that isn't getting as much attention. In the days before this week's convention, Republicans made a historic shift
on an issue that's long been core to their platform, abortion. I'll start with the significance
of the worrying that is not in this platform. That's reporter Laura Casisto, who covers abortion
for the journal. For the last four decades, the GOP has explicitly called for a so-called life amendment,
an amendment to the Constitution that would protect unborn children.
And you'll see that you don't have that kind of explicit language in the platform this time.
Instead, the platform is vaguer, saying the Constitution's 14th Amendment guarantees that
no person can be denied life or liberty without due process,
and that states can do what they want to protect it. That shift puts the party more in line with Donald Trump's position
after the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision overturned Roe v. Wade, but it also puts the party out of
step with its anti-abortion base. And I expected to come to Milwaukee and hear a lot about that,
base, and I expected to come to Milwaukee and hear a lot about that. Except practically no one here is talking about it. It's strange, because anti-abortion groups are typically very vocal,
and so are lawmakers who've gotten A-pluses from SBA Pro-Life America, the group that scores
members of Congress on their efforts to end abortion. Georgia Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene
is one of those A-plussers. She's also famously willing to spar with GOP leadership. And while
she told me she knows some anti-abortion groups are frustrated with the platform change and that
she shares some of those frustrations. Right now where we are in this time is I think the Supreme
Court did the right thing and they gave it back to the states to decide.
And that's our position with the Republican Party.
I pushed her to share more of her thoughts on this a couple of times, but she didn't elaborate.
Again, I've told you it's been moved back to the states, and at this time, I'm satisfied.
So why aren't anti-abortion groups raising their voices?
Where's home for you?
Orange County, California.
Very good.
Mauricio Leone is the senior operations director for the pro-life organization Live Action.
He told me he came to Milwaukee with 25 other activists to protest the platform change.
But on the relatively quiet streets here,
where the number of people protesting anything this week has been modest,
Mauricio said he was hoping for a bigger presence.
We were expecting more people to attend,
but unfortunately we didn't have that many activists here.
But across the nation and internationally, we have a lot of support.
Leone said the fact that the platform shift was only announced last week
didn't give him much time to mobilize ahead of the convention.
Other anti-abortion groups, including the Family Research Council and its leader Tony Perkins,
say they plan to press the issue here, too, until the attempted assassination of Donald Trump on
Saturday. Here was Perkins speaking on C-SPAN's Washington Journal on Monday.
It's changed the dynamics of the convention. We're kind of stepping back. We were very engaged in this platform and not happy with the way it turned out,
not happy with the fact that they silenced people who were opposed to their agenda.
But, you know, it's not the time.
It is time to come together.
We reached out to the Family Research Council, and in a statement, Perkins said,
although the platform has been adopted, that doesn't mean the group won't revisit the issue.
Quote, there is more to come.
So while current events have shifted the mood here at the RNC, people who track public opinion on abortion think larger forces are at play.
The biggest shift is the share of voters who say that abortion is their most important issue.
the share of voters who say that abortion is their most important issue.
That's Ashley Kurtzinger, the associate director of polling at the non-profit health policy research organization KFF. Pre-Dobbs decision, single-issue abortion voters were largely Republicans who wanted Roe to be overturned.
They were pro-life. They wanted abortion to be illegal.
And we have seen a complete flip
in that. Now the single issue abortion voters are Democratic women who are motivated because
they want abortion to be legal and they identify as pro-choice. Our poll shows that it's not a
motivating issue for Republican women. It's not going to be the issue that's going to be getting Republican
women out to vote this election and to vote for former President Trump. Back on the streets of
Milwaukee, Maurizio agreed. He thinks electability concerns have eroded some of the sway that
anti-abortion groups had over the Republican Party. Their main goal is to win elections,
right? Is to have Trump get back to power and be the next president of the Republican Party. Their main goal is to win elections, right? Is to have Trump get back to power
and be the next president of the United States.
And for that reason,
they're watering down the pro-life position
and also making sure that the current platform
is not as explicit in support of the pro-life position
anymore this year.
And a lot of Democrats, traditional Democrats,
have been disenfranchised. They're no longer aligned with the Democratic Party. So I believe
that the Republican Party and MAGA Republicans, they are trying to win those Democrats to support
the Republican position. But if that implies that Republicans are changing their longstanding
positions on abortion in practice, Laura told me they're not. They're
just focusing on the less flashy but no less significant ways that Trump could back their
positions if he regains the presidency. Part of that question is, who might he appoint to his
administration? We've seen the Biden administration carry out a number of policies that Trump could
roll back. For leaders in the anti-abortion movement, that's where the
rubber will hit the road. Many of them are fine with him for campaign purposes, saying this is a
state's rights issue, but they're going to be looking very closely at who does he appoint to
positions in the FDA, people who could enact on the policy level restrictions to the abortion pill,
could enforce the Comstock Act, a 19th century law that bans mailing abortion
pills, that sort of thing. The Biden campaign, meanwhile, is set to make abortion access a
central part of its pitch to voters. And Democrats will have a chance to tell the public their views
on abortion at their own nominating convention in Chicago next month.
Federal debt has long been a political football, but we're not hearing about it as much on the campaign trail this year.
What questions do you have about the national debt and what it means for the U.S. and its citizens?
Send a voice memo to WNPOD at WSJ.com or leave a voicemail with your name and location at 212-416-4328.
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Coming up, many aging migrants in the U.S. pay taxes,
but they stare down a retirement with no benefits.
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And now for a look at the markets today. A drop in Magnificent 7 shares helped send the
tech-heavy gauge down 2.8%, its biggest one-day decline since December 2022.
gauge down 2.8%, its biggest one-day decline since December 2022. The S&P 500 fell 1.4%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, meanwhile, added 0.6%, clinching a fresh high.
Investors fear high-flying chipmakers will face more U.S. trade restrictions regardless of who wins the November presidential election. TSMC got knocked after Donald Trump took
aim at Taiwan and its dominance in global
chip manufacturing, saying in a Bloomberg Businessweek interview published yesterday
that the American ally should pay for U.S. defense. In the same interview, the former
president said that the Federal Reserve shouldn't cut interest rates ahead of the election and give
the economy a boost. In a separate development, the International Monetary Fund has warned in
its latest report published yesterday that a fresh wave of tariffs could revive inflation and pressure central banks
to keep their key interest rates high. The IMF slightly lowered its growth forecast for the U.S.
this year. A growing number of undocumented immigrants are hitting retirement age in the U.S.
without the savings necessary to support themselves. According to the Center for Migration Studies of New York, roughly 100,000 of them were
ages 65 or older in 2022. While many migrants of all ages work under the table, some find jobs in
the formal sector. Those who do generally pay Social Security and Medicare taxes. And according
to the most recent analysis by the Social Security Administration, in 2010, unauthorized migrants made a net contribution of about $12 billion
to the Social Security system. But they are barred by law from receiving benefits from the program.
My colleague Pierre Bien-Aimé spoke with Wall Street Journal reporter Arian Campo-Flores and
asked him how aging migrants are dealing with this reality. For those who are undocumented, it can sometimes look pretty grim.
For one thing, they've often worked in pretty low-paying jobs,
and so it's much harder for them to accumulate any savings.
What that leaves many of them is a situation in which
they basically have to continue working until their bodies give out.
For some, they can rely on perhaps younger family members if they have them in the country,
and they have the ability to help them out.
And then there are some as well who just decide that they just need to head back to their native countries.
Is anything being done to address the situation?
The National Day Laborer Organizing Network that advocates on behalf of
day laborers in the U.S., many of whom are undocumented, launched a campaign earlier this
year to try to persuade the Mexican government, which has this new universal pension system that
it passed, to include unauthorized migrants living in the U.S. in that system. That proposal did not gain traction
in the most recent legislative session of the Mexican Congress, but it will be taken up again.
And the argument that they're making is that these folks have been contributing to the Mexican
economy because they've been sending back remittances. There are people as well who argue
that there is no justification for undocumented migrants in the U.S. to receive any of these
federal benefits like Social Security or Medicare because they have already received numerous
benefits from the U.S. by being here. For instance, if they have children, they are being educated in the public school
system. There are others who maybe receive emergency services over the years. There's also
been some analyses that have shown that the first generation immigrants on balance draw more in
benefits than they contribute. But that study also found that the children of those immigrants
are among the strongest contributors to the U.S. economy.
So it's a mixed picture.
That was Wall Street Journal reporter Arianne Campo-Flores
speaking to my colleague Pierre Bien-Aimé.
And that's what's news for this Wednesday afternoon.
Today's show was produced by Pierre Bien-Aimé and Anthony Bansi
with supervising producer Michael Cosmitas. Additional reporting by Luke Vargas. I'm Sabrina Siddiqui for The
Wall Street Journal. We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning. Thanks for listening.
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