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Republican congressman apologises for referring to ‘consensual rape’ in debate over Missouri abortion bill

GOP lawmaker backtracks on phrase and says he 'misspoke' on Senate House floor

Orion Donovan-Smith
Saturday 18 May 2019 05:31 EDT
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Missouri senate passes bill to restrict abortion: Gov Mike Parson 'The unborn deserves a up-or-down vote'

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A Republican Missouri legislator apologised on Friday for saying that some sexual assaults are "consensual rapes" during a debate over a new, restrictive antiabortion bill.

"I'm not trying to make excuses," said representative Barry Hovis, who represents the city of Jackson in southeastern Missouri. "Sometimes you make a mistake and you own up to it."

The lawmaker, who was elected in 2018, made the remark while speaking on the State House floor, arguing that the measure's eight-week window for abortions "gives [rape survivors] ample time" for the procedure.

Critics say many women do not know they are pregnant until after eight weeks, and the bill provides no exceptions for rape or incest.

The 30-year veteran of the Cape Girardeau Police Department then touched on his experience handling rape cases.

"Let's just say someone goes out and they're raped or they're sexually assaulted one night after a college party – because most of my rapes were not the gentleman jumping out of the bushes that nobody had ever met," Mr Hovis said.

"That was one or two times out of a hundred. Most of them were date rapes or consensual rapes, which were all terrible."

Representative Raychel Proudie, a Democrat, quickly rebuked him.

"There is no such thing, no such thing as consensual rape," she said to applause from the chamber.

Mr Hovis later told The Washington Post that he misspoke and said he believes "there was no such thing as consensual rape."

He added that, in all his years in law enforcement, he took the testimony of rape victims seriously.

"When a rape is reported, and I'll speak for myself, you always take the word of the victim," he said.

Missouri's GOP-controlled House passed the antiabortion bill on Friday, which prohibits abortions after eight weeks of pregnancy.

The bill comes as lawmakers in multiple states have passed restrictive abortion laws that advocates on both sides say are aimed at getting the Supreme Court to consider overturning Roe v Wade, the landmark Supreme Court decision that legalised abortion nationwide.

Mr Hovis' remarks recalled a controversial comment made in 2012 by Todd Akin, a former Missouri congressman, that "legitimate rape" rarely causes pregnancy.

After losing a 2012 race for US Senate, Mr Akin tried to clarify his words, saying he should have said "legitimate case of rape."

The Washington Post

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