Akin cares little about pressure from GOP leaders

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Until this week, Rep. Todd Akin was virtually unknown beyond his suburban district, associated more with his deep religious convictions than any legislative achievements.
Long before his comments about women's bodies and "legitimate rape" made him a potential flashpoint in the fall campaign, Akin was a favorite among home-schooling organizations and conservative church groups in the area where his relatives have lived for generations. He seldom authored bills or sought wider recognition.
Now Akin could help shape the national political debate in a Senate race that leaders of his own party figure he can't win, and they're worried he'll drag down other Republicans with him. But if Akin's 12 years in Congress have proven anything, it's that pressure from the party establishment carries little weight with him.
"He's never been popular among Republicans, and Todd Akin doesn't care," Saint Louis University political science professor Ken Warren said. "The best you can say for Todd is that he's a very principled guy. He believes what he believes, and he's not going to compromise those principles just to be in the mainstream."
Akin, 65, ascended in Missouri politics largely on his own. He grew up on a farm outside St. Louis, earned an engineering degree and went to work at now-bankrupt Laclede Steel Co., which his great-grandfather started. He and his wife, Lulli, settled on land in St. Louis County owned by Akin's father. Each Independence Day he would dress in colonial attire as the family hosted a party for the neighborhood.
The Akins home-schooled their four sons (three of whom graduated from the Naval Academy and became Marine Corps officers) and two daughters. Lulli Akin's involvement in home-schooling groups helped create the base of support that has long helped her husband's political career.
Akin, a member of the conservative Presbyterian Church in America, earned a master's of divinity degree from Covenant Theological Seminary in St. Louis in 1984. He never became a pastor but four years later won a seat in the Missouri House, where he established a track record as a staunch abortion opponent and supporter of gun rights.
Faith is never far from his mind. In a fundraising email sent to supporters Wednesday, Akin said he was accountable only to God and the voters, not "party bosses."
His anti-establishment streak started with his first run for Congress. In 2000, the party favored Gene McNary, a former St. Louis County executive who served in the George H.W. Bush administration and ran previously for governor and senator.
Despite being an underdog, Akin defeated McNary by 56 votes on a day when drenching rain kept turnout at 17 percent.
Akin's disregard for the advice of party elites can be seen throughout his congressional tenure.
While debating Bush's Medicare prescription drug benefit in 2003, House leaders assiduously courted rank-and-file members to vote for the legislation. Akin refused, saying the program would blow up the federal budget and attract more illegal immigrants.
He also voted against Bush's No Child Left Behind education package. And in 2008, Akin waited months after Sen. John McCain had secured the Republican presidential nomination before endorsing him, citing concerns about McCain's views on embryonic-stem-cell research among other issues.
In Congress, Akin has been something of a backbencher. He authored the Protect the Pledge Act in 2006 that sought to ensure the phrase "under God" was maintained when reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. The bill did not pass in the Senate.
But he is well known in Washington for his spirited pursuit of legislation on social issues, even in cases where it stands no chance of becoming law. Akin has sponsored or co-sponsored a raft of legislation affecting abortion, including a proposal that would ban all federal funding for abortions. He has also sponsored other legislation that would require parental consent for minors who want to obtain birth control.
His efforts have won him the support of conservative groups such as the Family Research Council, which was one of few organizations to stand by him after the rape remarks.
Akin was always something of an outsider in the House Republican caucus. He has relatively few friends in the caucus and tends to eschew House social gatherings. Inside the Capitol, Akin is considered amiable, if removed. He is generally friendly and cordial with individual members, including Democrats.
An Army veteran with a son who served as a Marine in Iraq, Akin serves on the Armed Services Committee and is chairman of a subcommittee on Seapower and Projection Forces. He lobbied for an appointment to the House's budget committee and was appointed after Republicans retook the majority. He also serves on the science and technology committee.
Akin, one of the first members of Congress to join the tea party caucus, has generated backlash before. In June 2011, a group of St. Louis-area religious leaders condemned his comments that liberalism "really is a hatred for God." He drew fire again in recent weeks for comparing federal student loans to "a stage 3 cancer."
Some considered Akin an underdog again in a three-way primary race for the Senate, but he dominated in the most conservative areas of Missouri and handily defeated millionaire businessman John Brunner and former state Treasurer Sarah Steelman. Polls showed he had a good chance of unseating incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill in November - a race crucial to Republican efforts to retake the Senate.
Everything changed Sunday. In an interview with St. Louis TV station KTVI, Akin said he understood that conception from rape was rare.
"If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down," Akin said. He has since apologized many times over.
But fellow Republicans, including presumptive presidential nominee Mitt Romney, have turned on Akin, calling for him to get out of the race. In addition to concern that he has forfeited any chance of winning in Missouri, there was growing worry that the fallout could hurt other congressional candidates and even Romney.
Republicans trying to force him out face a formidable challenge.
Akin has proclaimed that his success comes from not paying attention to politics. His campaign isn't run by a political operative but by his eldest son, Perry.
His unwavering opposition to abortion, support for prayer in school and gun rights and disdain for big government have attracted a solid base of support in an increasingly conservative state.
"One thing that has drawn me to Todd is his faith," said Don Hinkle, director of public policy for the Missouri Baptist Convention.
"A lot of people may not agree with his philosophies, but Todd Akin is a first-rate guy," said state Rep. Dwight Scharnhorst, a St. Louis County Republican. "Of all the people in Washington, D.C., if I had to rate one person that I would trust holding my wallet or keeping my grandchildren over the weekend, Todd Akin would be at the top of the list."
Another Republican state representative, Bill White of Joplin, described Akin as different from many elected officials who change their stance on issues based on the whims of voters or pressure for political elites.
Said White: "Money, power, position. My assessment is those things are not going to register with him."
___
Jackson reported from Washington. Associated Press Writer Chris Blank in Jefferson City, Mo., contributed to this report.
Long before his comments about women's bodies and "legitimate rape" made him a potential flashpoint in the fall campaign, Akin was a favorite among home-schooling organizations and conservative church groups in the area where his relatives have lived for generations. He seldom authored bills or sought wider recognition.
Now Akin could help shape the national political debate in a Senate race that leaders of his own party figure he can't win, and they're worried he'll drag down other Republicans with him. But if Akin's 12 years in Congress have proven anything, it's that pressure from the party establishment carries little weight with him.
"He's never been popular among Republicans, and Todd Akin doesn't care," Saint Louis University political science professor Ken Warren said. "The best you can say for Todd is that he's a very principled guy. He believes what he believes, and he's not going to compromise those principles just to be in the mainstream."
Akin, 65, ascended in Missouri politics largely on his own. He grew up on a farm outside St. Louis, earned an engineering degree and went to work at now-bankrupt Laclede Steel Co., which his great-grandfather started. He and his wife, Lulli, settled on land in St. Louis County owned by Akin's father. Each Independence Day he would dress in colonial attire as the family hosted a party for the neighborhood.
The Akins home-schooled their four sons (three of whom graduated from the Naval Academy and became Marine Corps officers) and two daughters. Lulli Akin's involvement in home-schooling groups helped create the base of support that has long helped her husband's political career.
Akin, a member of the conservative Presbyterian Church in America, earned a master's of divinity degree from Covenant Theological Seminary in St. Louis in 1984. He never became a pastor but four years later won a seat in the Missouri House, where he established a track record as a staunch abortion opponent and supporter of gun rights.
Faith is never far from his mind. In a fundraising email sent to supporters Wednesday, Akin said he was accountable only to God and the voters, not "party bosses."
His anti-establishment streak started with his first run for Congress. In 2000, the party favored Gene McNary, a former St. Louis County executive who served in the George H.W. Bush administration and ran previously for governor and senator.
Despite being an underdog, Akin defeated McNary by 56 votes on a day when drenching rain kept turnout at 17 percent.
Akin's disregard for the advice of party elites can be seen throughout his congressional tenure.
While debating Bush's Medicare prescription drug benefit in 2003, House leaders assiduously courted rank-and-file members to vote for the legislation. Akin refused, saying the program would blow up the federal budget and attract more illegal immigrants.
He also voted against Bush's No Child Left Behind education package. And in 2008, Akin waited months after Sen. John McCain had secured the Republican presidential nomination before endorsing him, citing concerns about McCain's views on embryonic-stem-cell research among other issues.
In Congress, Akin has been something of a backbencher. He authored the Protect the Pledge Act in 2006 that sought to ensure the phrase "under God" was maintained when reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. The bill did not pass in the Senate.
But he is well known in Washington for his spirited pursuit of legislation on social issues, even in cases where it stands no chance of becoming law. Akin has sponsored or co-sponsored a raft of legislation affecting abortion, including a proposal that would ban all federal funding for abortions. He has also sponsored other legislation that would require parental consent for minors who want to obtain birth control.
His efforts have won him the support of conservative groups such as the Family Research Council, which was one of few organizations to stand by him after the rape remarks.
Akin was always something of an outsider in the House Republican caucus. He has relatively few friends in the caucus and tends to eschew House social gatherings. Inside the Capitol, Akin is considered amiable, if removed. He is generally friendly and cordial with individual members, including Democrats.
An Army veteran with a son who served as a Marine in Iraq, Akin serves on the Armed Services Committee and is chairman of a subcommittee on Seapower and Projection Forces. He lobbied for an appointment to the House's budget committee and was appointed after Republicans retook the majority. He also serves on the science and technology committee.
Akin, one of the first members of Congress to join the tea party caucus, has generated backlash before. In June 2011, a group of St. Louis-area religious leaders condemned his comments that liberalism "really is a hatred for God." He drew fire again in recent weeks for comparing federal student loans to "a stage 3 cancer."
Some considered Akin an underdog again in a three-way primary race for the Senate, but he dominated in the most conservative areas of Missouri and handily defeated millionaire businessman John Brunner and former state Treasurer Sarah Steelman. Polls showed he had a good chance of unseating incumbent Democrat Claire McCaskill in November - a race crucial to Republican efforts to retake the Senate.
Everything changed Sunday. In an interview with St. Louis TV station KTVI, Akin said he understood that conception from rape was rare.
"If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down," Akin said. He has since apologized many times over.
But fellow Republicans, including presumptive presidential nominee Mitt Romney, have turned on Akin, calling for him to get out of the race. In addition to concern that he has forfeited any chance of winning in Missouri, there was growing worry that the fallout could hurt other congressional candidates and even Romney.
Republicans trying to force him out face a formidable challenge.
Akin has proclaimed that his success comes from not paying attention to politics. His campaign isn't run by a political operative but by his eldest son, Perry.
His unwavering opposition to abortion, support for prayer in school and gun rights and disdain for big government have attracted a solid base of support in an increasingly conservative state.
"One thing that has drawn me to Todd is his faith," said Don Hinkle, director of public policy for the Missouri Baptist Convention.
"A lot of people may not agree with his philosophies, but Todd Akin is a first-rate guy," said state Rep. Dwight Scharnhorst, a St. Louis County Republican. "Of all the people in Washington, D.C., if I had to rate one person that I would trust holding my wallet or keeping my grandchildren over the weekend, Todd Akin would be at the top of the list."
Another Republican state representative, Bill White of Joplin, described Akin as different from many elected officials who change their stance on issues based on the whims of voters or pressure for political elites.
Said White: "Money, power, position. My assessment is those things are not going to register with him."
___
Jackson reported from Washington. Associated Press Writer Chris Blank in Jefferson City, Mo., contributed to this report.
Evil is as evil does.
What a gift horse this guy is for not only Claire McCaskill and the Democratic party at large. I hope he NEVER quits the race, as the discussion has now also shifted to Paul Ryan and the phrase of "forcible rape", which is in a bill he co-sponsored. Mittens thought he was going to talk about nothing but hte economy from now till election day once he selected Ryan, now he will be bogged down in daily inquiries into what is or isn't rape.
 @Superman_1967 Sad thing here is that some more-or-less well-meaning people put their "faith" way ahead of their brains, and then say things that are patently stupid. Or support things that are patently stupid. The whole "Religious Right" falls into that mold, IMHO. (And I say this as a bible-believing evangelical Christian.) The really sad thing here is that both Akin AND Ryan may be as negligently ignorant of the real instructions and standards given in the bible as they are of the biology of human reproduction: they have learned to "hear" what they think they want to hear, and to ignore the rest.
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Yes, it will (hopefully) benefit the Democrats enormously. I find that a hopeful thing, because the Democrats actually tend to better represent the most critical core Christian social values. The Religious Right keeps latching onto Christian PERSONAL standards of conduct and trying to force those by legislation onto the masses - which Christians are not authorized by the New Testament to do at all. Anyway, Obama is a much better (and less frightening) President than loose-canon demigod Romney.
Being stridently principled is a great way to live your life. But it is a lousy way to be a Congressman. Politics is all about compromising to get big issues handled. Finding common ground with other views so things can move forward...versus stonewalling and doing nothing.
What Akin said was stupid. That said, should every politician that says something stupid be forced to resign or withdraw from a political race? Better think about that libs, because if Democrats were also forced to resign for saying something stupid there wouldn't be any left. Joe "Chains" Biden would be gone. So would Obama if we could find out which one of the 57 states he is fundraising in today. Hank Johnson would be gone if he survived Guam "tipping over." Then there is Nancy Pelosi, "Every month that we do not have an economic recovery package 500 million Americans lose their jobs." And let's not forget about Al Gore, "the earthâs mantle is âseveral million degreesâ at â2 kilometers or so down.â Or Harry Reid who described Obama as a "light skinned" African-American "with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one". How about Hillary Clinton speaking of Mahatma Gandhi  âHe ran a gas station down in St. Louis." The list goes on and on. No libs, Americans are no longer willing to play your games, we are tired of your double standards and your hypocrisy.
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@ByeByeBarry This case is different from all your examples. Everything you mentioned would fall under the category of gaffes, or "brainfarts". Akin, however, actually believes that women's bodies will not get pregnant if they are truly raped...far more than a gaffe, this is a member of the congresssional scientific committee with an archaic, ignorant, and extremely UN-scientific point of view.
 @virtual anomalyÂ
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 "This case is different from all your examples"
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I agree! Both Biden's and Hillary's "gaffes" have racial overtones, in fact they are downright racist which makes them even worse! An idiot who somehow thinks a woman has a lesser chance of becoming pregnant if she is raped pales in comparrison.
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 @ByeByeBarry Is this trolling, or "legitimate trolling"? If it is "legitimate trolling" does your brain have a way of "shutting the whole thing down" when you come up with this nonsense?
 @AesopsTables @ByeByeBarry is in a contest with "truth percolates" over who can come up with the dumbest troll comments. Â
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So far, I call it a tie.
 @T H I S  @AesopsTables  @ByeByeBarry Well, the one I encountered last night - "the" - gives them a run for the koolaid...
Regardless of the fact I think he is a fool, I have to admire him for his principles. He didn't run to please other Republicans. But, I just wish that people like him would realize that being elected by the people of your district means you have to address all the issues facing them, not just ones involving 'reproductive rights' (or taking those rights away from women). Use those principles to help find solutions to your constituents unemployment issues, use those principles to put better controls on runaway bank fraud which affects your constituents, use those principles to help the government figure out how to balance the budget so your constituents great grandchildren aren't buried in poverty because of our mistakes. Being a one-issue congressman is not what this country needs. Banning all abortions will not put people back to work, banning all abortions will not save people's homes from foreclosure. Banning abortions will not provide an education system which helps us for the future. As others also think, I'm pretty sure he won't win--in some ways that is too bad, in other ways, it is a very good thing. But we still need to find leaders who see the 'big picture' and not just one issue.
 @chickysgirl
"Regardless of the fact I think he is a fool, I have to admire him for his principles."...
I tend to agree - the pain for the GOP is only icing on the cake...
And, while he is a fool, I tend to consider him an honest no exceptions opponent to abortion - because IMHO anyone who allows for exceptions is hedging their position. IF one truly believes that abortion is "murder", they are more honest than those who make exceptions for rape or incest, or even for the life of the mother. But then, Willard has a long record of being "accommodating" when it comes to a new perspective...
 @chickysgirl "Regardless of the fact I think he is a fool, I have to admire him for his principles. "
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no, he is a religious loon and garners no respect.  I expect my congressman to have logic and common sense - not faith.
Even Ann Coulter is calling for him to step aside and let someone else challenge Sen. McCaskill for her seat. When the posterchild for conservative batsh*t lunacy says you're too crazy, you have a serious problem.
 @Mikeftm Oh, GOD! Has she entered into another 12 step program? Man, she gets soooo *itchy when she does that!
Wouldn't it be interesting for him to find out if he is related to Clay Aiken?
This guy worked with Paul Ryan on a personhood bill that wuld ban many forms of contraception. Paul Ryan is The GOP choice for Vice President.
But don't worry, there really is no war on women.
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http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2012/08/20/712501/paul-ryan-and-todd-akin-partnered-on-radical-personhood-bill-outlawing-abortion-and-many-birth-control-pills/?mobile=nc
Oh well, I hope he isn't too shocked when he loses, he was up on his opponent by 6 or 7 points, now he is only up 1. Na-na-na-na, na-na-na-na, hey hey hey, good bye.
 @BluefireJaguar excuse me, he was up by 11 points, just a week and a half ago.
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http://www.politico.com/p/2012-election/polls/house-senate
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Sounds like a true Republican.
Damn the torpedoes full speed ahead.
 @mstipton "Damn the torpedoes full speed ahead."
Especially when the torpedoes are on a circular path...
@mstipton  In case you haven't noticed, every Republican questioned has siad he should drop out but hey, lets not worry about the facts.
 @Mej47  "every Republican questioned" has the exact same point of view of Akin. You left that little "fact" out....
No surprise here.... as confirmed idiot, what would you expect? This self-centered moron has no clue. Lib's are jumping for joy.
If you want government filled with people who are thick in the head, stubborn, and unwilling to compromise, this is what you get. A certain political party is reaping what it has sown and I find it quite humorous.
@PilonidalCyst Â
OK, which party are you referring to? Sounds like both sides to me.
@Mej47. Are you really that âthick in the headâ?
Of course. Most of the Democrats might have finally realized that their crazy conservative counterparts canât conceive of compassionate civil compromise.
 @flyskiwindsurf That's a rhetorical question, right?