Republican Scott Jensen now says his campaign-trail promise to ban almost all abortions cost him the 2022 Minnesota governor's race and the issue could hurt future candidates if the party doesn't rethink its strategy.
At the same time, his running mate, former Vikings player Matt Birk, is redoubling his efforts in the anti-abortion movement, telling activists to not "back down" in a recent op-ed and fundraising blast to raise money for a crisis pregnancy center.
"It's time to focus on efforts in our own backyard and make the case for why the pro-life movement isn't going away anytime soon," Birk wrote.
The differing stances from the former members of the GOP ticket is a microcosm of the party's challenge following Roe v. Wade's reversal and a Democratic sweep of all Minnesota government in the midterm election. Given the chance by the U.S. Supreme Court after waiting decades to shape abortion policies, Republican-led states continue to pass strict bans on the procedure even as the issue hurts them electorally. Most recently, voters in Ohio overwhelming rejected a ballot measure that would have made it harder to guarantee abortion access in the state's Constitution.
Ahead of the 2024 election, in which Republicans have a chance to flip control of the Minnesota House and end Democrats' trifecta, some activists want party leaders to confront the balancing act they face in energizing the Republican base without pushing away swing voters on the abortion issue.
"We have to put this issue on the table," said Jennifer DeJournett, a GOP activist and president of Ballot Box Strategies. "There is no winning statewide and there is no winning in these suburban congressional seats — and some of these legislative seats — unless the voter trusts us and we have some kind of cohesive position and answer to this question."
Minnesota Republicans struggled to find that answer in 2022, including Jensen. His comment to several news outlets that he would work to ban abortions as governor helped him win the party's endorsement but fueled a multimillion-dollar ad campaign labeling him extreme before the general election. While he later shifted his stance to support exceptions for rape or incest, he lost to Gov. Tim Walz by 7 points.
"One statement that our top of the ticket made was 'I will ban abortion,' and that became the campaign slogan that the Democrats used to tie a weight around the neck of every single Republican running down ballot," said Kelly Fenton, a former Republican Party deputy chair and legislator who ran unsuccessfully for a House seat in Woodbury last fall.