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		For some U.S. Democrats, abortion isn't a top campaign topic
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		 [July 15, 2022] 
		By Richard Cowan and Rose Horowitch 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden 
		and other top Democrats are pushing to make abortion a central issue as 
		they try to retain control of the U.S. Congress in November elections. 
		But on the ground, some of the party's most vulnerable incumbents are 
		downplaying the issue.
 
 From Maine to Arizona, several Democratic incumbents instead are 
		emphasizing bread-and-butter issues like national security and job 
		creation as they battle to retain their seats in the Nov. 8 midterm 
		elections.
 
 Many are trying to survive in districts that have become more Republican 
		as a result of 2020 redistricting by heavily Republican state 
		legislatures.
 
 In the northwest corner of Ohio, Representative Marcy Kaptur is 
		emphasizing the populist themes she has campaigned on since 1982 as she 
		faces the toughest race of her career.
 
 In campaign appearances, Kaptur is talking about reining in CEO pay and 
		raising wages for blue-collar workers. Abortion "is not something she'll 
		be talking about," according to a person familiar with the race, who 
		asked not to be identified to talk frankly about it.
 
 
		 
		That's not what Biden and other Democratic leaders envisioned after the 
		Supreme Court overturned its Roe v. Wade decision that guaranteed a 
		nationwide right to abortion.
 
 "This fall, Roe is on the ballot," he said in a White House speech after 
		the June 24 decision.
 
 VOTERS SHIFT ATTENTION?
 
 The court's decision was cheered by Republicans who have worked for 
		decades to roll back abortion rights.
 
 But it is less popular with the public.
 
 Some 55% of Americans believe abortion should be legal in all or most 
		cases, according to a June Reuters/Ipsos poll.
 
 Some analysts say the court's decision could help Democrats shift 
		voters' attentions away from inflation and the lingering COVID-19 
		pandemic.
 
 U.S. voters historically have treated mid-term elections, which occur 
		halfway through a president's four-year term, as an opportunity to 
		rein-in the president's party. This time around that would mean 
		punishing Democrats by electing more Republicans.
 
 But abortion could turn that formula on its head in 2022.
 
 "If the focus is on a decision by the Republican-dominated Supreme 
		Court, the Democrats will appear less as a power that needs to be 
		balanced," said Paul Sracic, a political science professor at Youngstown 
		State University in Ohio.
 
		
		 
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			U.S. President Joe Biden speaks with Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur 
			(D-OH) as he arrives at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport in 
			Cleveland, Ohio, U.S., May 27, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein 
            
			
			
			 In Washington, Democrats are pushing 
			abortion rights to the fore. The House of Representatives has 
			repeatedly passed legislation that would establish abortion rights 
			by law, but those bills have been blocked by Republicans in the 
			Senate that is split 50-50 between the two parties. At least 60 
			votes are needed to advance most legislation. Back home, some endangered Democrats are talking 
			about the issue with voters. In New Jersey, Representative Tom Malinowski has 
			posted a dozen abortion rights messages on Twitter in the three 
			weeks since the court's decision.
 Residents of the suburban, Republican-leaning district largely 
			support abortion rights, said Ross Baker, a political science 
			professor at Rutgers. "These people tend to be influenced by very 
			abrupt changes to social policy," he said.
 
 But voters in some battleground districts tell Reuters that the 
			economy, not abortion, was their top concern.
 
 Public opinion polls put the economy at the top of voters' worries. 
			Crime, guns and immigration are among the issues that follow, with 
			abortion even further down the list.
 
 In south Texas, Henry Cuellar, the only Democrat in the House to 
			vote against abortion rights legislation last year, narrowly 
			defeated a liberal challenger in a Democratic primary who was backed 
			by abortion rights groups. The longtime conservative Democrat's 
			campaign messages since then haven't mentioned the issue.
 
 Likewise, Democrats Tom O'Halleran of Arizona and Jared Golden of 
			Maine have barely campaigned on the issue, according to a Reuters 
			review of campaign material.
 
 
			
			 
			In eastern Virginia, Representative Elaine Luria decried the Supreme 
			Court decision on Twitter as "a blow to women’s rights." But recent 
			campaign messages have emphasized her work to boost military 
			spending and investigate the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. 
			Capitol.
 
 Analysts caution that the issue could fade closer to Election Day as 
			other events capture voters' attention.
 
 "We can't be sure whether it will remain a highly salient issue four 
			or five months from now," Sracic said.
 
 (Reporting by Richard Cowan and Rose Horowitch; Editing by Andy 
			Sullivan and Aurora Ellis)
 
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