'The Supreme Court did us a favor': Democrats seize on abortion ruling
as midterm lifeline
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[July 20, 2022]
By Tim Reid
LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - Susie Lee, one of the
U.S. Congress's most endangered Democrats, has spent this year fighting
a tough re-election campaign in the face of soaring inflation and
weighed down by President Joe Biden's dismal approval numbers.
Then on June 24, the U.S. Supreme Court threw a potential lifeline to
the Nevada congresswoman as she seeks a third term in this November's
midterm elections: the justices ended federal abortion rights by
overturning the landmark 1973 Roe-v-Wade decision.
Within 24 hours, armed with an issue she hopes will galvanize voters and
reverse a disastrous-looking election year for Democrats, Lee launched
the first ad of her campaign - a $500,000 TV and digital attack on her
pro-life Republican opponent on the issue of abortion rights.
"We have a stark choice in the race for Congress," the ad declares.
Lee, like dozens of fellow endangered Democratic incumbents across the
United States, is refocusing much of her campaign on abortion rights,
hoping the Supreme Court's decision can help win back suburban voters
who have soured on her party because of high food and gas prices and an
unpopular president.
Frustrated with what they see as weak messaging by national party
leaders on Biden's policy achievements, some Democratic foot soldiers
say the overturning of Roe-v-Wade has thrown them a political lifeline,
a foot in the door of voters otherwise disinclined to listen to them
because of high inflation.
Party strategists and analysts warn, however, that the issue of abortion
rights will likely not be enough to save Democrats from losing control
of the U.S. House of Representatives, and possibly the Senate too.
Brian Stryker, a Democratic pollster, said that while there has been a
shift of about three percentage points in national opinion surveys
toward Democrats since the court's ruling, "inflation is still far and
away voters' top concern."
Kyle Kondik, a non-partisan political analyst at the University of
Virginia Center for Politics, said he understood why Democrats had moved
quickly to focus on abortion rights, "but it's not clear to me it's
moving the needle a ton."
Lee's district encompasses parts of suburban Las Vegas, in a state with
one of the highest inflation rates in the country at 14.9 percent. Lee
has spent months confronting the issue in her swing district, frequently
urging her party's leaders in Congress to do more to ease supply chain
problems and lower food and gas prices.
But, now she is focusing on abortion as much as the economy because "as
a woman I believe this an issue that will galvanize women," she told
Reuters.
April Becker, Lee's Republican opponent, said in an interview that
Democrats like Lee were using abortion as a way to "distract" voters
from their most pressing concerns: the cost of food and gas.
"I don't blame her for trying to change the subject," said Becker, who
opposes abortion except in the cases of rape, incest and if the mother's
life is in danger.
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Democratic congresswoman Susie Lee listens to doctors at a
roundtable in her Nevada House district, where abortion rights have
become a central issue in her re-election campaign after the June 24
Supreme Court ruling that ended federal abortion rights, in Las
Vegas, Nevada, U.S. July 11, 2022. REUTERS/Tim Reid
She said she has no plans to try to overturn abortion
rights enshrined in Nevada under a 1990 referendum, and said she
does not support a federal abortion ban, which many Republicans in
Congress support.
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Democratic volunteers, activists and women's rights groups in Lee's
district say the Supreme Court's decision has energized them as they
try to stop a Republican blowout this November.
Local Democratic clubs in the Las Vegas area have seen a surge in
membership, club leaders told Reuters. Deidre Radford, co-president
of the Red Rock Democratic Club, said friends normally uninterested
in politics have contacted her asking to work on phone banks and
text campaigns for Lee and other Democrats.
Radford is holding a "Roe, Roe, Roe Your Vote" event on July 27, and
membership of her club has increased from about 150 to nearly 190
because of the abortion issue, she said.
A rally to protest the ruling on the day it was announced was
organized in just three hours, rather than the weeks it usually
takes such protests, said Sue Burtch, co-executive director of the
Nevada National Organization for Women.
"The Supreme Court did us a favor and gave us a talking point,"
Burtch said.
Often voters are so allergic to partisan politics they don't want to
engage, but the ending of federal abortion rights cuts through that.
It gave volunteers on the ground an opening to approach voters with
a real-world event that could impact their families, Burtch said.
Some activists interviewed expressed frustration with Democratic
leaders over the Supreme Court ruling, saying they have been too
timid on the issue in the face of Republican assaults on abortion
rights.
"Democratic messaging has been all over the place. It's been soft.
Republicans are really good at messaging," Burtch said.
Lee bristled when asked about the frustration expressed by Burtch
and other activists.
"They should be pissed off at Republicans," she said.
Some of the eight on-the-ground Democrat workers and abortion
activists who talked to Reuters conceded that surging inflation is
still a big problem for Democrats, and that the abortion issue may
not be enough keep Congress in Democrats' hands.
"Everyone feels the pinch at the gas pump, the bite every time you
go to the grocery store," said Lani Paz, head of the Southwest
Democratic Club.
(Reporting by Tim Reid, Editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair Bell)
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