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A photograph of Representative Anna Abeytia (D-AZ) working while cradling her newborn child became the unlikely flashpoint for a heated exchange over abortion and political civility this week.
The controversy began when Representative Nick Kupper (R-AZ) responded to the image with a now-deleted post on X that acknowledged Abeytia's devotion as a mother while drawing a pointed contrast to her history with abortion.
"This is wonderful to see a mother caring for her kids," Kupper wrote. "However, it would have been wonderful if all of her kids had been given the same opportunity at life. Abortion is hideous."
For background, Abeytia had previously gone public more than a year ago with her personal abortion experience, a deliberate choice, she said, to underscore that such deeply personal decisions should remain outside the reach of the government.
Kupper's post struck her as a direct affront to that vulnerability.
"My first initial reaction was, 'Wow, he's being a real [expletive],' because why do you feel the need to post that when ... we're celebrating my child's birth and him being there?" Abeytia told AZCentral. "That diminishes me as a person, as a mom, as lawmaker and all because you believe that abortions are hideous.”
Her request was an apology not for his convictions, but for the manner in which he expressed them and the personal toll it took.
Kupper, however, refused, and he confirmed removing the post at her urging but maintained that his stance on abortion was something he would not walk back.
He drew a firm line between his actions and his beliefs, saying he had no intention of expressing regret for how he views abortion.
Two state senators quickly came to Abeytia's defense. Senator Analise Ortiz (D-AZ) was direct in her support, describing Abeytia as "an incredible mom who's bravely shared her story" to make clear that government has no place in decisions about how families are built.
Senator Brian Fernandez (D-AZ) then framed this symptom of a deeper problem in political culture. "Turning a mother's dedication into a harsh personal attack is truly disheartening," he wrote. "If this is what modern Christian politics has become, we've lost our way."
Fernandez closed with a call for a different approach, urging leaders to "lead with grace, love more, and hate less."
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