Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley told Iowa State Fair-goers Saturday it is important to help women who have abortions, even though she is pro-life.
The 51-year-old Republican presidential hopeful said at the Des Moines Register Political Soapbox that she finds it unlikely that Republicans will be able to pass a federal ban on abortion and they should stop demonizing women who decide to have abortion.
Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year some states have allowed abortions to continue. Others, like Iowa, have passed near-total bans and been “pro-life,” Haley said. But it would be challenging for any Republican administration to sign a federal ban, given the makeup of Congress, Haley said.
“In order to pass a federal law, you have to have a majority of the house, 60 Senate votes, and a signature of a president. We haven’t had 60 Senate votes in over 100 years,” Haley said. “We might have 45. So no Republican can ban abortion any more than a Democrat can ban state laws.”
Republicans in South Carolina — where Haley served as governor from 2011 to 2017 — proposed subjecting women who have abortions to the state’s homicide laws. Under South Carolina law, a person convicted of murder faces at least 30 years in prison and the possibility of the death penalty, according to NBC News.
But Haley said that is the wrong approach. She said she had a college roommate who was raped and people need to be compassionate.
“We have to stop demonizing that issue and humanize that,” Haley said. “What we need to do is save as many babies as we can and support as many moms as we can.”
Haley on the campaign trail has touted that the U.S. needs to be tougher on adversaries such as China, Russia and Iran. She has called China a “national” threat for infiltrating the U.S.
SFA Fund, a federal Super Pac that supports her, just released its first political TV ad in Iowa and New Hampshire, with Haley’s stance against China front and center.
On the Soapbox Saturday, Haley said Chinese businesses are buying Iowa land and hog farms.
“We’re going to make sure we deal with China once and for all, and Iowa is the front line,” Haley said. “Iowa is an important state. Everybody likes to think that it’s because of the caucus. But when you look at what is happening with the threat behind China, think Iowa.”
On Saturday morning, Haley said during her Fair-Side Chat with Gov. Kim Reynolds, ahead of her appearance at the Register’s Soapbox, that Chinese companies steal millions of dollars worth of research at American colleges and “spread Chinese propaganda.”
“They steal $600 billion worth of intellectual property from us every year,” Haley said.
A former U.N. ambassador, Haley said she’s negotiated with China and Russia before. With speaking to Chinese leaders, she said “you go to them with strength.”
“The first thing is we make sure they no longer buy U.S. soil, and we take back what they’ve already purchased. We go to our universities, and we say: ‘You either take Chinese money or you take American money, but the days of taking both are over,'”she said. “We get that infiltration out of our universities. We go to China, we say we will end all normal trade relations with you until you stop killing Americans.”
F. Amanda Tugade covers social justice issues for the Des Moines Register. Email her at ftugade@dmreg.com or follow her on Twitter @writefelissa.
Philip Joens covers retail, real estate and RAGBRAI for the Des Moines Register. He can be reached at 515-284-8184, pjoens@registermedia.com or on Twitter @Philip_Joens.