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Warren Fiske
By Warren Fiske November 4, 2022

Vega downplays her comments disassociating rape and pregnancy

If Your Time is short

  • Congressional candidate Yesli Vega, R-Va., recently denied that she had said "a woman can't get pregnant from being raped."
  • Vega, in fact, did not make that comment during a much-publicized interview in spring. To the contrary, she said she was aware of one case where a woman did get pregnant from being raped.
  • But Vega did suggest that women might be less likely to get pregnant from rape “because it's not something that's happening organically. You're forcing it.” Such claims have been disproven by research.

Republican Yesli Vega was recently asked to elaborate on a controversial statement she made about rapes resulting in pregnancies during her campaign for Virginia’s 7th Congressional District seat.

A television reporter from WVAW in Charlottesville asked Vega on Oct. 20 whether "she believes (a) woman can’t get pregnant from being raped," a charge that her Democratic opponent, Rep. Abigail Spanberger, is making a focus this fall.

"That is absolutely ridiculous," Vega said. "Those were never my comments. I think that it is despicable that (Spanberger) would use something as traumatic as that to score cheap political points."

Gianni Snidle, the spokesperson for the Virginia Democratic Party, called Vega’s denial a "lie."

We ran a fact-check and found that Vega has not said a woman can’t get pregnant from rape. But she did suggest that women, for special reasons, are unlikely to get pregnant from being raped — a claim medical experts have long rejected.

The controversy stems from comments Vega made this spring when, as first reported by Axios Richmond, Vega was taped talking to an unidentified woman at a campaign event in Stafford County. Vega — who opposes abortion except in cases of rape, incest or when a mother’s life is endangered — was asked what Congress should do if the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its Roe v. Wade decision (which it later did).

Vega expressed support for new state-level restrictions. She added, "The left will say, ‘Well, what about in cases of rape or incest?’ I'm a law-enforcement officer. I became a police officer in 2011. I've worked one case where, as a result of a rape, the young woman became pregnant."

Vega was then asked, "I’ve actually heard that it's harder for a woman to get pregnant if she's been raped. Have you heard that?"

Vega replied, "Well, maybe because there's so much going on in the body. I don't know. I haven't, you know, seen any studies. But if I'm processing what you're saying, it wouldn't surprise me. Because it's not something that's happening organically. You're forcing it. The individual, the male, is doing it as quickly — it's not like, you know — and so I can see why there is truth to that. It's unfortunate."

Featured Fact-check

The claim that rape is unlikely to lead to pregnancy has "no biological plausibility" and is "not grounded in any physiology or scientifically valid data," according to the American American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

"Repeating previously debunked lies shows ignorance about medical facts," Jen Villavicencio, an OB-GYN who works for the medical organization, wrote in an email. "Worse, suggesting that survivors of sexual assault can’t get pregnant is hurtful and makes light of the very real trauma they endure."

Perhaps the most widely cited study about rape and pregnancy was published in 1996 by the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. It found that, nationally, about 5% of rapes in which the victim was aged 12 to 45 resulted in pregnancy. The study estimated that 32,101 pregnancies result each year from rapes, often stemming from family and domestic violence.

We asked Vega’s campaign to elaborate on her statements about the connection between rape and pregnancy. We received a statement that, without explanation, accused Spanberger, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., of "lying."

Spanberger has often said that Vega has "doubted" whether a women can get pregnant from rape and sometimes she’s gone a step further. For example, a TV ad aired by her campaign in August said, "Yesli Vega was caught on tape saying women couldn’t get pregnant from rape."

Our ruling

Vega said "those were never my comments," when a TV reporter recently asked her whether she believes a woman can’t get pregnant from rape.

She was referring to taped comments she made in the spring when an unknown woman questioned Vega about her abortion views. Vega didn’t say a woman can’t get pregnant from rape. To the contrary, she said during her 11-year career in law enforcement, she knew of one instance where that occurred.

But there’s more to this story. Vega also suggested to the unknown woman that women might be less likely to get pregnant from rape "because it's not something that's happening organically. You're forcing it." Such claims have been disproven by research and denounced by medical experts.

Vega parsed a reporter’s question and gave a misleading answer. We rate her denial Half True.

Our Sources

esli Vega, WVAW interview, Oct. 20, 2022

Democratic Party of Virginia, "Yesli Vega denies existence of audio tape where she doubts likelihood of pregnancy from rape," Oct. 24, 2022 

Axios, "Scoop: Spanberger rival Yesli Vega doubts pregnancy after rape," June 27, 2022

Ned Oliver, tweet on Vega tapes, June 27, 2022 

Reuters, "Rape trauma as barrier to pregnancy has no scientific basis," Aug. 20, 2012

American Journal of  Obstetrics and Gynecology, "Rape-related pregnancy: Estimates and descriptive characteristics from a national sample of women," August 1996

Email from Kate Connors, senior media relations specialist for the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Nov. 3, 2022

Text from Yesli Vega’s campaign, Oct. 26, 2022

Abigail Spanberger for Congress, TV ad, Aug. 26, 2022

Spanberger, WAMU interview, Oct. 14, 2022

Spanberger, CBS19 interview, Oct. 21, 2022

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Vega downplays her comments disassociating rape and pregnancy

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