Democrats look to abortion-rights threat to boost midterm election
prospects
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[May 04, 2022] By
Gabriella Borter and James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats have
needed something to turn around their flagging midterm election
fortunes, and the U.S. Supreme Court may have just given it to them.
A leaked draft showing the court's conservative majority apparently
poised to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision has set off a
political firestorm over abortion rights just as the 2022 election
season heats up.
U.S. abortion rights have been under direct threat for years, if not
decades. But if the high court follows through and does away with
constitutional protection for terminating a pregnancy, the issue will
crystallize for millions of voters like never before, Democratic
advocates and strategists say.
"You have a right that is wildly popular with the electorate, and you
have an electorate that has not really grappled with the fact that it
could be taken away," said Jessica Floyd, president of American Bridge,
a Democratic political action committee. "The dynamic here is fairly
unprecedented."
Democrats quickly seized on the issue as one that could reshape a
difficult political environment going into the November elections, when
control of both the U.S. Senate and the House of Representatives will be
at stake.
Democratic candidates and party-aligned groups sent out fundraising
pleas pegged to the prospect of Roe being overturned. "Every single one
of my GOP (Republican) opponents supports dangerous, restrictive
anti-abortion laws," congressman Tim Ryan, who is running for Senate in
Ohio, wrote in an email to supporters on Tuesday.
The party in power typically loses seats in the first term of a new
president. With opinion polls showing Democratic President Joe Biden
unpopular with a majority of Americans, analysts have forecast
Republicans to take over the House and perhaps the Senate as well.
But polls have also shown the right to abortion to be broadly popular. A
Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted on Tuesday found 63% of respondents,
including 78% of Democrats and 49% of Republicans, would be more likely
to back candidates who support abortion rights in November.
Democrats contend the clear-and-present danger to reproductive rights
will galvanize independent voters, particularly suburban women and women
without college degrees, to vote for their candidates.
"There's going to be a whole swath of voters who may not consistently
vote for Democratic candidates, but who will be really animated around
the dramatic change in the landscape for abortion access," said Kristin
Ford, a spokesperson for NARAL Pro-Choice America.
NARAL said it had seen a "big uptick" in donations and website traffic
since the news broke late on Monday. Alongside other abortion rights
groups Planned Parenthood Action Fund and Emily's List it has announced
a $150 million investment in spending on the midterm elections, mostly
in swing states and states that will be pivotal to preserving abortion
access across the country.
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Pro-abortion demonstrators protest in Foley Square, after the leak
of a draft majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito
preparing for a majority of the court to overturn the landmark Roe
v. Wade abortion rights decision later this year, in New York City,
New York, U.S., May 3, 2022. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
Anti-abortion groups also plan to use the upcoming
court decision - due by the end of June - to drive turnout. Mallory
Carroll, a spokesperson for Susan B. Anthony List, said the group's
political action committee has been on the ground talking to voters
in nine battleground states since last summer.
"If this draft opinion... is resemblant of the final opinion, this
will be a huge encouragement to the pro-life movement because it
will reflect a return on investment of our political engagement
these last 50 years," Carroll said. "I think that it's going to
mobilize people on both sides."
ECONOMY STILL TOP CONCERN?
Geoffrey Skelley, an elections analyst for the website
FiveThirtyEight, was skeptical the abortion issue would be enough to
improve the chances of Democrats holding onto the House and the
Senate.
"Midterm elections are still mostly about the president and the
president's party, and Joe Biden has approval ratings in the low
40s," he said.
Skelley said he expected the economy, jobs and inflation to remain
the top concerns for many voters, including those who support
abortion rights.
The prospects could be better for Democrats in state governor's
races, he said. Should the Supreme Court overturn Roe, the legality
of abortion will be left to individual states.
Both Michigan's Gretchen Whitmer and Wisconsin's Tony Evers are up
for reelection. Their Republican opponents oppose abortion rights
and would support legislative efforts in those states to ban the
procedure.
"I promise you this: I will fight like hell to make sure abortion
remains safe, legal, and accessible in our state," Whitmer said on
Twitter on Monday.
The nonpartisan University of Virginia Center for Politics suggests
there could be a voter backlash in states including Arizona, New
Hampshire, North Carolina and Pennsylvania, where support for
abortion rights is strong but where Republicans are seeking to curb
them.
The issue also could boost Democrat Stacey Abrams in Georgia, who
narrowly lost to Governor Brian Kemp four years ago.
"If you were looking for a message to reactivate the suburbs in
Georgia, this is a great one," said Jared Leopold, a former aide to
the Democratic Governors Association.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter and James Oliphant; Editing by
Colleen Jenkins and Rosalba O'Brien)
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