Democrats need to change the way they address abortion. This idea has been persistently circulating since Trump's inauguration, as the Democratic Party attempts to conceive of a way to recover from its humiliating defeat. In a slew of high-profile op-eds , anti-abortion Democrats have called for the party to soften its stance on reproductive rights in order to appeal to progressives who support state-sanctioned forced motherhood; party leadership has echoed this sentiment in a series of perplexing statements and interviews .

Unfortunately, abortion is not fading as an issue for conservative legislators. While the Democrats have been wringing their hands and assuring media that they don't believe in ideological purity tests, the political arm of the anti-abortion movement has continued forging ahead with startling efficacy. In the past seven years, nearly 350 restrictions on abortion access have been enacted. In the past few months, we've seen states passing particularly cruel and byzantine legislation: laws mandating that aborted or miscarried fetuses must be buried or cremated, laws that would require women to notify their rapists before getting an abortion, and laws that would essentially ban terminations after 13 weeks.

In an emailed statement, DNC spokesperson Xochitl Hinojosa tepidly emphasized to Broadly that the Democratic Party platform is pro-choice. "Tom Perez has stated previously that he is pro-choice," she added. "That has not changed." But even if the platform remains the same, top Democrats have hardly been vociferous in their defense of reproductive rights. In May, most notably, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told the Washington Post that abortion is "kind of fading as an issue" for Democratic voters.

Most recently, Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chairman Ben Ray Luján told The Hill that the party will continue to provide funding to candidates who oppose abortion rights. "There is not a litmus test for Democratic candidates," he said. His comments immediately attracted the ire of several reproductive rights advocacy groups: NARAL Pro-Choice America president Ilyse Hogue lambasted them as indicative of "an ethically and politically bankrupt strategy," and Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards tweeted that reproductive rights are "non-negotiable," adding that her organization will "hold any politician who says otherwise accountable."

That the Democrats are willing to submit to the anti-abortion movement isn't really a new development. "We have so many anti-choice Democrats in state houses… [who] have really been helping to pass a lot of the anti-choice restrictions that we see today," Renee Bracey Sherman, the senior public affairs manager at the National Network of Abortion Funds, told Broadly over the phone. "We didn't get to seven states with one abortion clinic with just the Republican Party. There were Democrats that helped."

Enabling a bipartisan attack on women's right to healthcare in the name of party unity is only a viable solution if you're fine with forcing people to bear children against their will.

When pundits and politicians argue that Democrats should "compromise" on abortion or to rethink their approach to the subject, they tend to speak in vague absolutes. Abortion is "polarizing" and "divisive." It "alienates" red-state voters. Framing it this way—as a fundamentally ideological debate, rather than one with tangible consequences—trivializes the real and pressing danger of restricting abortion access. Laws that limit abortion erode women's constitutional right to access full healthcare, endanger them, and enshrine into law the idea that their basic bodily autonomy matters less than the belief that an embryo is sacrosanct.

When women cannot safely and legally terminate their pregnancies, some resort to dangerous and illegal alternatives, like the estimated hundreds of thousands of women in Texas who've performed DIY procedures, or the women across the country who have risked arrest to self-induce an abortion. Those who are forced to carry to term against their will face dire consequences as well: Research shows that women who are denied abortion care are three times more likely to end up below the federal poverty level after two years, and less likely to be able to leave abusive partners.

Supporting a staunchly anti-abortion candidate isn't a harmless ideological "compromise"—it's capitulation to a dangerous, blatantly repressive agenda, one that can have profound effects on women's ability to access crucial healthcare services. Take, for instance, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards, a Democrat who ran on an anti-abortion platform and received the inaugural leadership award from Democrats for Life of America in 2016. "The future of the Democratic Party is a stake," the organization's executive director said in a typo-riddled press release at the time. "And, John Bel Edwards shows that Democrats can gain victories in Red States like Louisiana, if the party is willing to reverse course, listen to the voters, and support pro-life candidates."

If politicians like Edwards are the future of the Democratic Party, it's an extremely bleak one for women and families. As governor, Edwards signed into law a series of extremely draconian measures, making Louisiana one of just seven states to require women to wait three full days before getting an abortion and attempting to defund Planned Parenthood despite a massive STD epidemic in the state. Under Edwards, the number of clinics in the state dropped to three, down from seven in 2011.