Pew Tries To Hide Americans’ Hesitancy About Unlimited Abortion
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A piece from The federalist critiques Pew Research Center’s 2026 abortion polling, arguing that the survey and its presentation are deceptive and skew public opinion to favor abortion activists’ agendas. It highlights Pew’s claim that 60% of Americans say abortion should be legal in all or moast cases, based on an 8,500-person January/March 2026 survey, and contrasts it with the article’s view that broader public opinion supports abortion limits.
Key points the article raises:
– It contends Pew underplays that 76% of Americans want some limits on abortion, and that 39% believe life begins at conception, figures the piece says Pew buries in its analysis.
– It argues Pew implies that attitudes about the ease of obtaining abortion are shaped by state restrictions, noting Pew’s bold statements that restrictiveness is linked to perceptions of difficulty.
– It claims Pew omits that most Americans favor banning abortion beyond 14 weeks and that questions about “medical/chemical abortion” (mifepristone) are not framed with safety concerns; the piece asserts Pew uses the term “medication abortion” to downplay risks.
– The article asserts that Pew does not disclose safety concerns or harms associated with abortion pills and that mifepristone is currently under FDA review amid safety signals the Biden management is accused of twisting.
– It notes rising opposition to chemical abortion among Republicans (43% in 2026 vs. 32% in 2024) and a smaller but growing share among Democrats (to 10%),with 18% of Americans unsure about mifepristone.
– The Federalist cites other polling and safety concerns about chemical abortions,including references to studies and polls that describe higher danger rates and potential misuse.
The piece concludes with a biographical note on Jordan Boyd, The Federalist writer who produced the overview.
Abortion polling is notoriously deceptive and known to strategically skew and misrepresent public opinion to favor abortion activists’ radical agendas. Pew Research Center’s latest survey appears to be no different.
In its 2026 American Trends Panel analysis, Pew uses its January 2026 survey of more than 8,500 U.S. adults to assert that a majority of Americans, 60 percent, “continue to say abortion should be legal in all or most cases.”
Nearly four years after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a majority of Americans continue to say abortion should be legal in all or most cases (60%).
Read our full report on abortion here: https://t.co/FHuLfNx2Oh pic.twitter.com/nKhKrN1qRw
— Pew Research Center (@pewresearch) March 12, 2026
Pew suggests that number means states’ attempts to use the post-Dobbs v. Jackson era to outlaw or limit abortion are unpopular and out of touch. The research center’s write-up of its newly retrieved data even notes, in bold, that “In recent years, the public has become more likely to say obtaining an abortion in their area would be difficult.”
“Restrictiveness of state law on abortion is associated with perceptions of how easy or difficult the procedure is to obtain,” the article further argues in bold.
Absent from Pew’s analysis is the fact that 76 percent of Americans believe there should be some limits on abortion. Buried at the very bottom of the Pew article is also the fact that approximately four in 10 U.S. adults, 39 percent, agree that “human life begins at conception, so an embryo is a person with rights.”
In fact, Pew’s latest research recorded the lowest support, 23 percent, for the radical unlimited abortion-for-all touted by Democrats since 2019. That’s down six percentage points from the 29 percent recorded shortly after the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson decision.
While Pew’s questions didn’t bother to delve into the specifics of the limits favored by respondents, previous polling suggests most Americans support banning abortion beyond 14 weeks gestation. By the beginning of the second trimester, unborn babies have a heartbeat, possess a fully formed skeleton and limbs, can feel pain, and are known to react to different tastes.
The question “Do you think medication abortion – that is, the use of a prescription pill or a series of pills to end a pregnancy – should be legal or illegal in your state?” also appeared to elicit a majority of those surveyed, 55 percent, to claim chemical abortion should be legal.
Yet, nowhere in the poll does Pew disclose that abortion pills put women at risk of harm and abuse. Nor are respondents informed that mifepristone is currently under review by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration after the Biden administration “twisted the data to bury one of the safety signals.” Instead, Pew uses the oxymoron “medication abortion” to describe the drug that more than one in 10 women suffer a serious adverse event after taking.
Another underemphasized aspect of the data was the fact that Americans’ desire for chemical abortion to be outlawed is up six percentage points, from 20 to 26 percent, since 2024 — a jump in opposition that Pew suggested had only “grown modestly.”
As Pew notes, the increase in the share of Republican respondents who want to make pill-induced abortion illegal is up to 43 percent compared to the 32 percent recorded in 2024. The percentage of Democrat respondents who think chemical abortion should be prohibited is also up, climbing to 10 percent from the eight percent reported in 2024.
Overall, 18 percent of Americans are unsure of where they stand on mifepristone abortions. Previous polling suggests that six in 10 Americans say the abortion drug regimen responsible for the majority of the nation’s abortions is “unsafe” or were unsure of its safety. Majorities surveyed by McLaughlin and Associates in 2025 also agreed that “chemical abortions are far more dangerous than advertised” and that abortion drugs can be maliciously used “by sexual abusers to cover up rape, exploitation and sex-trafficking.”
Jordan Boyd is an award-winning staff writer at The Federalist and producer of “The Federalist Radio Hour.” Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire, Fox News, and RealClearPolitics. Jordan graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on X @jordanboydtx.
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