Herschel Walker Urged Woman To Have A 2nd Abortion, She Says

The Georgia Senate candidate’s ex-girl­friend says he want­ed her to ter­mi­nate a preg­nan­cy in 2011. She chose to have their son instead.

On Thursday, Herschel Walker spoke at a cam­paign stop in Wadley, Ga., but did not address a report that he had paid for a woman’s abortion.Credit…Nicole Buchanan for The New York Times

A woman who has said Herschel Walker, the Republican Senate nom­i­nee in Georgia, paid for her abor­tion in 2009 told The New York Times that he urged her to ter­mi­nate a sec­ond preg­nan­cy two years lat­er. They end­ed their rela­tion­ship after she refused.

In a series of inter­views, the woman said Mr. Walker had bare­ly been involved in their now 10-year-old son’s life, offer­ing lit­tle more than court-ordered child sup­port and occa­sion­al gifts.

The woman dis­closed the new details about her rela­tion­ship with Mr. Walker, who has anchored his cam­paign on an appeal to social con­ser­v­a­tives as an unwa­ver­ing oppo­nent of abor­tion even in cas­es of rape and incest, after the for­mer foot­ball star pub­licly denied that he knew her. He called her “some alleged woman” in a radio inter­view on Thursday.

The Times is with­hold­ing the name of the woman, who insist­ed on anonymi­ty to pro­tect her son.

In the inter­views, she described the frus­tra­tion of watch­ing Republicans ral­ly around Mr. Walker, dis­miss her account and bathe him in prayer and praise, call­ing him a good man.

She said she want­ed Georgia vot­ers to know what kind of man Mr. Walker was to her.

As a father, he’s done noth­ing. He does exact­ly what the courts say, and that’s it,” she said. “He has to be held respon­si­ble, just like the rest of us. And if you’re going to run for office, you need to own your life.”

The inter­views and doc­u­ments pro­vid­ed to The Times togeth­er cor­rob­o­rate and expand upon an account about her abor­tion first pub­lished on Monday in The Daily Beast. The Times also inde­pen­dent­ly con­firmed details with cus­tody records filed in fam­i­ly court in New York and inter­viewed a friend of the woman to whom she had described the abor­tion and her even­tu­al breakup with Mr. Walker as those events occurred.

Mr. Walker’s cam­paign declined to com­ment about the woman’s account.

The woman reaf­firmed the key details of her account: She and Mr. Walker con­ceived a child in 2009 and decid­ed not to con­tin­ue the preg­nan­cy. Mr. Walker was not mar­ried at the time. She pro­vid­ed to The Times a $575 receipt she was giv­en after pay­ing for the pro­ce­dure at an Atlanta women’s clin­ic, and a deposit slip show­ing a copy of a $700 check that she said Mr. Walker gave her as reim­burse­ment. She also shared a “get well” card with a hand­writ­ten mes­sage — “Pray you are feel­ing bet­ter” — and signed sim­ply, “H.”

Mr. Walker has repeat­ed­ly denied her account, call­ing it a “flat-out” lie and the work of Democrats and the hos­tile news media. He has dis­put­ed that he signed the card. He told Fox News on Monday that he sends mon­ey “to a lot of people.

I know this is untrue. I know it’s untrue,” Mr. Walker said on the “Hugh Hewitt Show” on Thursday. “I know noth­ing about any woman hav­ing an abortion.”

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A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.
A woman told The New York Times that she and Mr. Walker, who is now the Republican Senate nominee in Georgia, decided in 2009 not to continue a pregnancy they conceived. She provided to The Times a $575 receipt she was given after paying for the procedure and said he reimbursed her. Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

Later on Thursday, he gath­ered reporters in a lum­ber yard 150 miles east of Atlanta for his first pub­lic event since the report first sur­faced and read a state­ment that did not direct­ly address it. Instead, he blamed his polit­i­cal opponents.

You’re here because Democrats are des­per­ate to hold onto pow­er,” he said. “They are des­per­ate to make this race about my family.”

Mr. Walker is run­ning against Senator Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, in what is one of the year’s most expen­sive and com­pet­i­tive races as Republicans try to win con­trol of the Senate.

Mr. Walker and his for­mer girl­friend start­ed their rela­tion­ship around November 2008, accord­ing to her pater­ni­ty suit. She said they first met in Atlanta, where she lived and Mr. Walker reg­u­lar­ly vis­it­ed. She would occa­sion­al­ly trav­el to the Dallas area, Mr. Walker’s home at the time.

The next year, when they con­ceived a child, the cou­ple agreed that she should end the preg­nan­cy, she said. Mr. Walker nev­er expressed any moral or reli­gious con­cerns about abor­tion, she said. He told her that it was “not a good time” for a baby.

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The woman told The Times that she and Mr. Walker decided in 2009 to end a pregnancy. She provided a “get well” card with a handwritten message — “Pray you are feeling better” — and signed simply, “H.” Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.
The woman told The Times that she and Mr. Walker decided in 2009 to end a pregnancy. She provided a “get well” card with a handwritten message — “Pray you are feeling better” — and signed simply, “H.” Mr. Walker has repeatedly denied her account.

The two con­tin­ued their rela­tion­ship and, two years lat­er, the woman became preg­nant again. This time, she said, she told Mr. Walker she want­ed to have the child. But Mr. Walker did not, and again made the case that the time was not right. The rela­tion­ship end­ed on Sept. 16, 2011, accord­ing to her pater­ni­ty suit. Her son was born the fol­low­ing May.

In an inter­view, a friend who lived in Atlanta at the time described con­sol­ing the woman through her morn­ing sick­ness before her abor­tion and sup­port­ing her after­ward. Years lat­er, when the woman was preg­nant again, she dis­closed in phone and in-per­son con­ver­sa­tions that Mr. Walker had asked her to end the preg­nan­cy but she was adamant that she would not, accord­ing to the friend.

Mr. Walker also appears to have been involved with two oth­er women around this time. In an inter­view in the December 2011 issue of Playboy mag­a­zine, he iden­ti­fied Julie Blanchard, who is now his wife, as his fiancée. And in January 2012, Myka Dean, then a share­hold­er along with her moth­er in Mr. Walker’s com­pa­ny Renaissance Man, accord­ing to finan­cial records, filed a police report in Irving, Texas, in which she said that for 20 years she had been in an “on-off-on-off” rela­tion­ship with Mr. Walker. (Ms. Dean, who died in 2019, told the police that Mr. Walker threat­ened her after she told him that she want­ed to date oth­er peo­ple. Mr. Walker denied the alle­ga­tion through a spokes­woman in April.)

The woman inter­viewed by The Times said Mr. Walker nev­er phys­i­cal­ly abused her.

In April 2013, the woman filed for child sup­port in Manhattan when she was a grad­u­ate stu­dent at Columbia University and “strug­gling to make ends meet,” accord­ing to a state­ment from her lawyer at the time. Mr. Walker was ini­tial­ly ordered to make pay­ments, first of $2,500 a month and lat­er of $3,500 a month. The final order of child sup­port was not issued until July 2014, accord­ing to court records. Mr. Walker has made his pay­ments on time, the woman said.

Mr. Warnock has also been involved in a child cus­tody dis­pute. His ex-wife sued in April to adjust the terms of their agree­ment and increase pay­ments to account for the income he earns as a sen­a­tor and as lead pas­tor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. A spokes­woman for the Warnock cam­paign declined to com­ment for this article.

The woman said Mr. Walker hard­ly knew his 10-year-old son — she said he had “maybe only seen him three times” — and had not spo­ken to her in years. She said she and Mr. Walker com­mu­ni­cat­ed only through Ms. Blanchard, who the woman said some­times called her to ask her son’s size before send­ing gifts.

And by ‘he,’ I mean ‘she’ sends him Christmas presents, birth­day presents,” the woman said.

As recent­ly as Friday, Ms. Blanchard reached out to com­plain about reporters inves­ti­gat­ing Mr. Walker, accord­ing to the woman.

Ms. Blanchard and the woman pre­vi­ous­ly appeared to have had a cor­dial rela­tion­ship, chat­ting over text about sum­mer camp and gifts for the child. In May, the woman wished Ms. Blanchard well on pri­ma­ry day, accord­ing a text pro­vid­ed by Mr. Walker’s cam­paign, say­ing she was “pray­ing for you guys!!”

The woman, a Democrat, said she had strug­gled to watch Mr. Walker cam­paign on pub­lic posi­tions so clear­ly at odds with his pri­vate conduct.

Mr. Walker has said he sup­ports abor­tion bans with no excep­tions for rape, incest or to save the life of the mother.

The fact that I had a choice — now he’s in the pub­lic try­ing to say he wants to put a ban on abor­tion com­plete­ly,” the woman said, adding, “It appalled me.”

Mr. Walker also has assailed “absen­tee fathers,” par­tic­u­lar­ly in the Black com­mu­ni­ty. But the woman said Mr. Walker him­self had been so unin­volved in her son’s life that his absence was a run­ning joke between her and her fam­i­ly and friends.

The woman said she was giv­en no advance notice about Mr. Walker’s Senate can­di­da­cy and was shocked when she learned he had entered the race.

Mr. Walker’s per­son­al life has been a source of tur­moil in his cam­paign. He talked often about a 22-year-old son, Christian Walker, in ear­ly cam­paign mate­ri­als and appear­ances, but lat­er acknowl­edged three more chil­dren he had not pub­licly men­tioned, includ­ing the 10-year-old son, an adult daugh­ter and anoth­er young son. (Christian Walker, a con­ser­v­a­tive social media star in his own right, began open­ly attack­ing his father after The Daily Beast’s report was pub­lished, accus­ing him and his Republican allies of hypocrisy.)

Mr. Walker dis­put­ed that he had not acknowl­edged his chil­dren. “I just chose not to use them as props to win a polit­i­cal cam­paign,” he said in a state­ment in June. “What par­ent would want their child involved in garbage, gut­ter pol­i­tics like this?”

When those reports first appeared in June, the woman said, Ms. Blanchard asked her to pub­licly vouch for Mr. Walker’s on-time child sup­port pay­ments in an effort to make the case that Mr. Walker was a respon­si­ble father. The woman said she declined.

Maya King report­ed from Atlanta; Lisa Lerer and Jonah E. Bromwich report­ed from New York. Ken Bensinger and Alexandra Berzon con­tributed report­ing. Kitty Bennettcontributed research.

Maya King is a pol­i­tics reporter cov­er­ing the South. Prior to join­ing The Times, she was a nation­al polit­i­cal reporter at Politico, where she cov­ered the 2020 pres­i­den­tial elec­tion. @mayaak­ing

Lisa Lerer is a nation­al polit­i­cal cor­re­spon­dent, cov­er­ing cam­paigns, elec­tions and polit­i­cal pow­er. @llerer

Jonah E. Bromwich cov­ers crim­i­nal jus­tice in New York, with a focus on the Manhattan dis­trict attor­ney’s office, state crim­i­nal courts in Manhattan and New York City’s jails. @jone­sie­man.

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