Of course not, because the man cannot feasibly demand a pregnancy be continued, and no one is advocating that.
What is being proposed is equal access to remove all parental rights and responsibilities post conception but prior to another date. One partner currently already has this right, so using that as a basis, it is about extending it to the other.
Personally, I long for a world where both partners have that right, but the usage on either side is minimal due to personal responsibility.
Abortion doesn't just have financial implications.... It has physical and moral ones two.
I just don't think you can equate men being able to financially remove themselves either pre or post conception from these consequences of a child with abortion.
I'm regularly on GD arguing against a Marxist view of the world (one major facet or which is that the state can and should seek an equality of outcome) and I think this is one of thoose case in points. Men and women are not the same, the consequences of a child being conceived are not the same and so any attempt to 'equalise' rights in this regard between the sexes is a bad idea.
Theoretically I can understand the argument as to why a man should not held financially liable for a child in situations which could include at an extreme a sexual partner deliberately lying about contraception with the intent of becoming preganant against her sexual partners expressed wishes. However practically this would increase the burden on the state as more of the costs of raising children would pass to the state and no doubt some people would seek to abuse the system by declaring themselves financially divorced from their offspring whilst continuing their relationship with the mother...
That's before you get to the myriad of problems it would cause if someone wished to 'reverse' their decision and be a parent to a child they previously 'fincially' aborted and what the effect would be on the children 'financially' aborted by their fathers' (yes I know this already happens in practice - but do we want it state sanctioned?)
I just don't think you can separate up the financial, moral and physical implications of conceiving, bearing and giving birth to a child. As such there can't be an equality of rights in this regard for men and women in my view as the implications of child conception, and carriage to and after birth are not the same for men and women