Updated

Pro-life leaders responded en masse on Thursday after former South Bend, Ind. Mayor Pete Buttigieg appeared to condone infanticide and late-term abortions during an appearance on "The View."

"What if a woman wanted to invoke infanticide after a baby was born -- you'd be comfortable with that?" co-host Meghan McCain asked. Buttigieg balked at McCain's argument.

"We're talking about families that may have picked out a name -- may be assembling a crib -- and they learn something excruciating and are faced with this terrible choice -- and I don't know what to tell them morally about what they should do," he said. "I just know that I trust her and her decision medically or morally isn't going to be any better because the government is commanding her to do it in a certain way."

Live Action President Lila Rose blasted Buttigieg: "He said as long as a mother wants to abort a baby, at any age, she should be able to [e]ven if that means partially delivering a full-grown, 7 lb infant, who can recognize her mother’s voice, & then stabbing her neck & suctioning out her brain."

MEGHAN MCCAIN CONFRONTS BUTTIGIEG ON LATE-TERM ABORTIONS: 'THIS IS GOING TO HURT YOU'

Rose was referring to the highly controversial practice known as partial-birth abortion.

Students for Life President Kristan Hawkins also condemned Buttigieg's comments, claiming that his response was inappropriate for women facing difficult circumstances.

PRO-LIFE DEM CLASHES WITH BUTTIGIEG AT TOWN HALL: 'WE DON'T BELONG'

Buttigieg's comments came amid a nationwide battle over legal access to abortion. Officials like Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam have come under fire for statements supporting looser restrictions on the procedure. Northam, in particular, backed the decision to withhold care from infants based on the decision of mothers.

"When we talk about third-trimester abortions, these are done with the consent of obviously the mother, with the consent of the physician — more than one physician, by the way — and it’s done in cases where there may be severe deformities. There may be a fetus that’s non-viable," he said in January 2019.

Buttigieg previously faced scrutiny over the issue when Kristen Day, executive director of Democrats for Life, asked him whether there was room in the party for pro-lifers like her. As with McCain, Buttigieg told Day that he thought women should be able to make the decision.

On Thursday, Day said Buttigieg's comments were "shameful." "It is shameful to see Democratic Candidates continue to dismiss the humanity of viable preborn babies in the later stages of pregnancy and excuse the practice because it is rare. Tens of thousands of babies' lives are ended in the later stages of pregnancy and even the Guttmacher Institue admits that most are not for reasons of fetal anomalies," she told Fox News.

"You would think after our conversation in Des Moines, Mayor Pete would have sought out more information on pro-life Democrats who are a critical constituency in states such as of Indiana that vehemently oppose late-term abortion," she added.

AS MARCH FOR LIFE KICKS OFF, PRO-LIFE WOMEN ARE FIGHTING TO REDEFINE FEMALE 'EMPOWERMENT'

The former mayor's comments came just weeks after the March for Life, which is the nation's largest annual pro-life gathering. March for Life President Jeanne Mancini argued that Buttigieg's comments put him outside of the mainstream in American politics.

Marjorie Dannenfelser, who leads the pro-life Susan B. Anthony List, called Buttigieg "extremely radical" and agreed with McCain's assessment that his position would hurt him with voters.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Democratic voters appear open to restrictions on abortion. According to a Marist poll released in January, 44 percent of Democrats said they were "more likely to vote for" candidates who would limit abortion to the first trimester.

That stands in stark contrast to Democratic leaders' positions, which Trump and other pro-life advocates warn would allow abortion up until the point of birth. All of the top Democratic presidential candidates have called for a repeal of the Hyde Amendment, a historically bipartisan measure that blocks federal funding for most abortions.