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Trump works to win over Catholic voters on abortion issue

US President Donald Trump, flanked by (from R) Response coordinator for White House Coronavirus Task Force Deborah Birx, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, US Vice President Mike Pence and Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci, speaks during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, in the Brady Briefing Room at the White House on March 25, 2020, in Washington, DC. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump promised Wednesday to sign an executive order that would require health care providers to provide medical care to all babies born alive as he makes an election-year push to appeal to voters who oppose abortion.

The White House did not release further details about the order, but Trump’s announcement follows numerous attempts by GOP lawmakers in Washington and in state capitals around the country to pass legislation that threatens prison for doctors who don’t try to save the life of infants born alive during abortions.

Organizations
representing obstetricians and gynecologists say the law already
provides protections to newborns, whether born during a failed abortion
or under other circumstances. But when anomalies are so severe that a
newborn would die soon after birth, a family may choose what’s known as
palliative care or comfort care. This might involve allowing the baby to
die naturally without medical intervention.

It is not necessarily
a crime to forgo sophisticated medical intervention in cases where
severe fetal abnormalities leave a newborn with no chance of survival.
This has happened on rare occasions in the course of a late-term
abortion. The U.S. government recorded 143 deaths between 2003 and 2014
involving infants born alive during attempted abortions.

In a
video message Wednesday to the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast, Trump
said his “born alive executive order” would ensure that babies born
alive no matter the circumstances “receive the medical care that they
deserve.”

“This is our sacrosanct moral duty,” Trump said.

Critics said Trump was trying to “score low-hanging political points.”

“It
seems this administration will once again seek a solution to a
nonexistent problem,” said Jacqueline Ayers, a vice president at Planned
Parenthood’s political advocacy arm, the Planned Parenthood Action
Fund. “Health care providers already have an obligation to provide
appropriate medical care.”

Trump’s comments come as his campaign
and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden work to win over Roman
Catholic voters in the Nov. 3 presidential election. For decades, that
group has been a pivotal swing vote in U.S. presidential elections, with
a majority backing the winner — whether Republican or Democrat — nearly
every time.

Advocates for Trump say faithful Catholics should not
vote for Biden, who is a practicing Catholic, because of his support
for abortion rights. Critics of Trump say he is too divisive and callous
to merit their vote.

A Pew Research Center poll over the summer
found 50% of Catholics saying they support Trump in the presidential
election, compared with 49% backing Biden. A Pew Research Center
analysis of voters in 2016 showed 52% of Catholics voted for Trump.

Among Catholic voters in the midterms, 56% said abortion should be legal in all or most cases, while 42% say it should be illegal in all or most cases, according to AP VoteCast.

AP VoteCast also found abortion low on the list of priorities for midterm voters: Just 2% nationwide in 2018 considered abortion the top issue facing the country. About a quarter named health care and immigration; roughly 2 in 10 named the economy and jobs.

Associated Press writer Hannah Fingerhut contributed to this report.