Hannity Resigns Himself to Abortion Rights Victory in Ohio: ‘If We’re Really Gonna Be Honest About This…’

 

Sean Hannity told viewers on Tuesday that some anti-abortion measures espoused by Republicans are not in line with the views of most Americans.

On Tuesday night, voters in Ohio elected to enshrine the right to an abortion in the state’s constitution after the Republican legislature and governor imposed a six-week ban, which was subsequently blocked by a court last year. In the meantime, pro-choice activists managed to land the issue on this year’s ballot. As of this writing, 55.6% of Ohio voters opted to add reproductive rights to their constitution.

The provision states that abortion may be banned after fetal viability, or around the 23rd week of pregnancy. However, conservatives argue the language is so broad as to render that benchmark meaningless.

“If we’re really gonna honest about this – and I consider myself pro-life, but I understand that’s not where the country is – I would say first trimester, 15 weeks seems to be where the country is,” Hannity said. “And these issues will be decided by the states.”

He went on to say that abortion law will not be decided in Congress, but at the state level.

The Fox News host previously warned that some of the anti-abortion measures being enacted around the country are out of step with where most people are. In August, Republicans in Ohio tried to raise the threshold for amending the constitution via referendum from a simple majority to 60%. That measure failed, prompting Hannity to offer a warning.

“I believe in the sanctity of life, but I think politically that there is– Republicans have gotta say as Bill Clinton once said – I never thought I’d quote him – ‘rare,’ ‘legal,’ and I’d add the word[s], ‘very early in a pregnancy,'” Hannity said at the time. “That seems to be – politically – where the country is. Maybe I’m wrong. But we’ll see. That vote in Ohio is pretty, pretty sobering.”

Watch above via Fox News.

Tags:

Mike is a Mediaite senior editor who covers the news in primetime. Follow him on Bluesky.