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Democrats
see
abortion
wins as
a
springboard
for 2024
as GOP
struggles
to find
a
winning
message
By
MICHELLE
L.
PRICE,
CHRISTINE
FERNANDO
apnews.com
WASHINGTON
- Voters
threw
their
support
behind
abortion
rights
in Ohio,
Virginia
and
elsewhere
as
Democrats
look to
springboard
off
those
wins by
using
the
issue to
drive
turnout
and
shape
next
year’s
races
for the
White
House,
Congress
and
other
elections.
Ohio
offered
the
clearest
snapshot
on
Tuesday
of the
issue’s
salience
more
than a
year
after
the U.S.
Supreme
Court
ended
the
nationwide
right to
abortion.
Voters
in the
increasingly
Republican-leaning
state
resoundingly
approved
an
amendment
to the
state
constitution
to
protect
access
to
abortion
services.
Democrats
also
harnessed
the
issue in
Virginia,
riding
it to
retake
control
of the
Legislature,
and in
Kentucky,
giving
Democratic
Gov.
Andy
Beshear
a second
term
after he
made
abortion
rights
central
to his
campaign
in the
deeply
Republican
state.
Election
night
was an
energizing
moment
for
Democrats
hoping
abortion
rights
will
pull
voters
to the
polls in
the 2024
presidential
election.
The
campaigning
and
results
for the
amendment
in Ohio,
the only
state
with an
abortion
question
on the
ballot
this
year, is
a
precursor
to
similar
ballot
measures
expected
to be
put to a
vote in
several
states
next
year.
That
includes
Arizona
and
Nevada,
which
play
pivotal
roles in
the
White
House
race.
Abortion
also
will sit
at the
center
of a
slate of
state
Supreme
Court
races in
2024.
For the
anti-abortion
movement,
the
latest
post-Roe
defeat
came
after
its
scattershot
messaging
struggled
to win
over
voters
in a
state
that has
become a
testing
ground.
The
scope of
the
victory
for
abortion
access
in Ohio
suggests
that a
significant
number
of
Republicans
voted in
favor of
the
amendment,
signaling
deep
divisions
in the
party
over
their
next
steps.
Elisabeth
Smith,
director
of state
policy
and
advocacy
at the
Center
for
Reproductive
Rights,
said the
anti-abortion
movement
is “on
their
heels”
after
turning
to
misinformation
and
fearmongering
in Ohio
in a
losing
cause.
“It’s
become
clear
that the
majority
of
Americans
support
abortion
rights
and want
to see
abortion
remain
legal
and
accessible,
and the
anti-abortion
side
knows
that,”
Smith
said.
According
to AP
VoteCast,
a
nationwide
survey
of more
than
94,000
voters,
63% of
voters
in the
2022
midterm
elections
said
abortion
should
be legal
in most
or all
cases.
About
one-third
of
voters
said it
should
be
illegal
in all
or most
cases.
Marjorie
Dannenfelser,
president
of the
anti-abortion
group
SBA
Pro-Life
America,
said
Ohio’s
results
“serve
as a
warning
sign for
the GOP
heading
into
2024”
and
“proved
this is
not a
formula
for
success
for the
GOP.”
“The
true
lesson
from
last
night’s
loss is
that
Democrats
are
going to
make
abortion
front-and-center
throughout
2024
campaigns,”
Dannenfelser
said in
a
statement.
“The GOP
consultant
class
needs to
wake up.
Candidates
must put
money
and
messaging
toward
countering
the
Democrats’
attacks
or they
will
lose
every
time.”
Anti-abortion
groups
said the
outcome
was
fueled
by
millions
in
campaign
donations
that
abortion-rights
supporters
poured
into the
Ohio
race,
including
large
donations
from
out-of-state
groups.
The
American
Civil
Liberties
Union,
which
advocates
for
abortion
rights,
spent
more
than $9
million
on races
in Ohio,
Pennsylvania
and
Virginia
this
year,
with
over $6
million
of that
going to
Ohio,
said the
group’s
chief
political
and
advocacy
officer,
Deirdre
Schifeling.
The
messaging
problem
for
anti-abortion
groups
goes
deeper
than
their
loss in
Ohio.
In
Virginia,
Republican
Gov.
Glenn
Youngkin
tried to
rally
voters
behind
GOP
legislative
candidates
by
staking
out what
he and
other
Republicans
felt was
a
middle-ground
approach:
a
proposal
to ban
abortions
after 15
weeks of
pregnancy
with
exceptions
for
rape,
incest
and
situations
where
the
mother’s
life was
at risk.
Youngkin
pitched
his
“reasonable
limits”
as an
alternative
to the
complete
abortion
bans or
six-week
bans in
effect
in some
Republican-controlled
states,
and many
GOP
candidates
in swing
districts
publicly
supported
the
proposal.
It
didn’t
work.
Democrats
questioned
whether
Youngkin
and
Republicans
would go
further
if they
ended up
controlling
the
governor’s
office
and the
Legislature.
“Youngkin
was
supposed
to be
the guy
who
showed
Republicans
how to
win on
abortion,
and he
failed
spectacularly,”
said
Mini
Timmaraju,
president
and CEO
of
Reproductive
Freedom
for All,
a group
formerly
known as
NARAL
Pro-Choice
America.
The
governor
“thought
he was
going to
give a
playbook
to
Republicans,
but he
actually
gave a
playbook
to
Democrats
on how
to help
voters
connect
the dots
between
candidates
and
their
abortion
policies.”
Democrats
have
made
clear
they
plan to
make the
issue
central
in races
for the
presidency
and down
the
ballot
next
year.
Biden’s
campaign
manager,
Julie
Chavez
Rodriguez,
said in
a
statement
that
“Americans
overwhelmingly
side
with
President
Biden
and
Democrats’
vision
for this
country”
and
“that
same
choice
will be
before
voters
again
next
November.”
In a
fresh
sign of
the
administration
trying
to link
its
electoral
prospects
to the
results,
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
made a
rare
appearance
before
reporters
on the
White
House
driveway
Wednesday
and
said,
“It was
a good
night
and the
president
and I
obviously
have a
lot of
work to
do to
earn our
reelection.
But I’m
confident
we’re
going to
win.”
In the
Republican
presidential
primary,
South
Carolina
Sen. Tim
Scott
and
Florida
Gov. Ron
DeSantis,
who
signed a
six week
ban in
his
state,
have
said
they
would
support
a
national
abortion
ban at
15
weeks.
Other
candidates
have
been
vaguer
on their
answers.
Former
President
Donald
Trump,
who
nominated
three
Supreme
Court
justices
who
helped
overturn
Roe vs.
Wade,
has
refused
to say
whether
he would
sign a
national
ban and
he has
warned
the
issue
can be
politically
difficult
to
campaign
on.
Trump
has said
he could
“live
with”
the
procedure
being
banned
by
individual
states
or
nationwide
through
federal
action.”
In the
wake of
the Ohio
vote,
Republican
presidential
candidate
and
biotech
entrepreneur
Vivek
Ramaswamy
said on
CNN that
abortion
opponents
need to
speak
about
the
issue
differently
to gain
more
support.
He has
voiced
support
for
states
that
enacted
six-week
bans,
but also
said he
would
not back
a
federal
abortion
ban.
“Our
pro-life
movement,
and I am
part of
it,
needs to
be
better
about
the way
we
discuss
this
issue,
actually
talk
about
greater
access
to
adoption,
to child
care --
further
-- even
go
further
to
sexual
responsibility
for
men,”
said
Ramaswamy,
who
lives in
Ohio.
Ohio was
the
seventh
state
since
Roe was
overturned
to
support
ballot
measures
protecting
abortion
rights
or to
reject
measures
aimed at
limiting
access.
In
states
where
abortion
could
directly
be on
the
ballot
in 2024,
abortion
rights
advocates
said
they
closely
watched
the Ohio
election.
Ohio
“provided
an
example”
for
Arizona
for
strategizing
and
building
a
statewide
coalition
of
advocacy
groups,
said
Chris
Love,
senior
adviser
to
Planned
Parenthood
Advocates
of
Arizona.
In a
preview
of
abortion’s
impact
on races
down the
ballot,
voters
in
Pennsylvania
on
Tuesday
elected
Democrat
Dan
McCaffery
to an
open
state
Supreme
Court
seat.
Though
Democrats
hold the
majority
on the
court in
that
swing
state,
McCaffery
made
defense
of
abortion
rights
central
to his
contest
with
Republican
Carolyn
Carluccio.
Several
anti-abortion
groups
signaled
that how
they
respond
to the
string
of
losses
will be
among
the most
crucial
political
discussions
for
Republicans
heading
into
2024.
One
thing
seems
certain:
They
plan to
leverage
their
clout
within
the
party to
make
sure
continue
the
fight
for
abortion
restrictions
remains
a
priority
for
their
candidates.
“We
persevered
for 50
years to
overturn
Roe v.
Wade,”
Protect
Women
Ohio,
which
led the
anti-abortion
messaging
in that
state,
said in
a
statement
Tuesday
night.
“Ours is
a
movement
that has
always
endured,
and
always
will.
“Tomorrow,”
the
group
said,
“the
work
starts
again.”
___
Associated
Press
writer
Seung
Min Kim
contributed
to this
report.
___
The
Associated
Press receives
support
from
several
private
foundations
to
enhance
its
explanatory
coverage
of
elections
and
democracy.
See more
about
AP’s
democracy
initiative
here.
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