Yes, I’ll deny it.
Again with the silence.

I’m assuming that you are in the Atlanta archdiocese and have read everything he has had to written on abortion and attended any and all functions and heard every homily that he’s ever had on abortion and the unborn.
I haven’t (nor could I claim that about any Bishop from any area) but even in my far corner of the diocese I’ve heard enough from him to know that he considers the rights of the unborn to be the one issue above all else when forming one’s conscious about selecting leaders.
Of course not. I can’t pretend to know in what context the Bishop’s remarks were made but I do know how some reporters operate (first hand knowledge I’m afraid). Asking leading questions that portray more of the interviewers feelings rather than the interviewee is the modus operandi of some journalists. One could carefully craft a set of questions and incorportate them into their article in a way that could make anyone say that Mao, Stalin, or even Hitler were not such bad guys is really not so hard to do. Plus journalists always quote their subjects verbatim, right?
I’m sorry but I can’t jump on the bandwagon and judge anyone (not to mention come dangerously close to myself bearing false witness) based on quotes given to an Italian reporter and printed in the Times of London.