The servile response that Fox News’ evening propagandists offered Donald Trump’s new abortion statement on Monday night provides a prime illustration of how the network functions — not as a conservative news outlet promoting an ideological message, but as a Trump propaganda outlet trying to bolster his chance to win in November.
Fox’s stars assured their viewers that the position Trump laid out is “exactly right,” represents “democracy,” and was “the only thing, really, he could do at this point without committing political suicide.” They also provided a platform for Trump boosters who cited their own anti-abortion bona fides while rallying behind his remarks.
Stopping abortion is theoretically an issue of profound moral importance on the right. Conservative movement leaders like House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) have called abortion a “holocaust.” The text of the Republican Party’s most recent platform claims that “the unborn child has a fundamental right to life which cannot be infringed” and calls for a constitutional amendment that would ban all abortions. The Heritage Foundation, a prominent right-wing think tank taking the lead in developing a future Trump administration’s agenda and staffing, states that “the first freedom” is “the right to life” and lays out a series of policies to achieve “the pro-life movement’s goal” of banning abortion “from the moment of conception.”
Trump’s vague Monday statement that abortion “will” be left to the states in no way precludes him from enacting those policies if elected. But his unwillingness to forthrightly endorse them for explicitly political reasons — after holding myriad positions on abortion but appointing the conservative Supreme Court justices who ultimately rescinded Roe v. Wade’s constitutional protection for abortion rights — drew criticism from anti-abortion activists and from some right-wing media figures.
“President Trump's retreat on the Right to Life is a slap in the face to the millions of pro-life Americans who voted for him in 2016 and 2020,” Trump’s former vice president, Mike Pence, wrote on X.
That internal debate is not playing out on Fox News, the most popular and influential organ on the right. Instead, Fox’s leading pro-Trump shills used Monday night’s broadcasts to stress to their viewers that Trump is doing what he needs to do to win the presidency.
Sean Hannity, a Republican Party operative who uses his show to help Trump and other GOP leaders win elections, has been urging the party to adopt a more palatable abortion position to prevent further defeats like the ones Republicans suffered in 2022 and 2023. On Monday night, after warming up his audience with attacks on President Joe Biden, he offered a full-throated endorsement of Trump’s statement, which he falsely claimed had taken a national abortion ban off the table.