Abortion gives Democrats a shot at flipping a Senate seat in Wisconsin
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[September 16, 2022]
By James Oliphant
GREEN BAY, Wis. (Reuters) - Nicole Slavin
was a reliable Democratic voter in a conservative region of Wisconsin,
but she realized casting a ballot was no longer enough after the state's
abortion access vanished almost overnight.
Slavin, a business development director, called upon her network of
contacts to mobilize a group of women across party lines in support of
U.S. Senate candidate Mandela Barnes, a Democrat who backs abortion
rights. She knocked on doors for Barnes and organized an event for him
last week that drew more than 100 women to a Green Bay brewery.
"There's no option of staying quiet and sitting down anymore," said
Slavin, 48.
Evidence is building that a wave of women voters might be the
difference-maker if Democrats are to keep their Senate majority and stem
their expected losses in the House of Representatives in the Nov. 8
midterm elections.
Wisconsin is one of several states where voter registrations among women
have surged since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June.
That decision gutted national protections for abortion and left an 1849
law outlawing most abortions in Wisconsin on the books, prompting the
state's four abortion clinics to end the procedure.
Women have outpaced men in new registrations in Wisconsin by almost 10%,
according to an analysis by the Democratic data firm TargetSmart. Women
vote at a greater rate than men in presidential elections, but that gap
narrows in midterms.
The battleground state is critical to Democrats' hopes of holding onto
their slim majority in the Senate. If Barnes can defeat incumbent
Republican Senator Ron Johnson, it would provide a cushion should the
party lose a seat in a state such as Nevada or Georgia.
The Senate Majority PAC, an outside group that supports Democratic
candidates, made Johnson the target of the first abortion-centered TV ad
it aired after the Supreme Court's ruling.
Tom Bonier, chief executive officer of TargetSmart, theorizes many new
registrants are young women who took abortion rights for granted.
"We are seeing these voters now pivoting to some level of action,"
Bonier said.
Adrianna Pokela, 23, said she cried after Roe's overturn. She will vote
in her first midterm election this November and is trying to convince
others of her generation to do the same.
In July, she helped plan a protest march in Green Bay that drew several
hundred people.
"I am working my butt off to find ways to express the importance of this
election," Pokela said.
MOTIVATED VOTERS
Opinion surveys show the issue of abortion is rising in importance for
Democratic voters in an election cycle dominated by concerns over
inflation.
A Wall Street Journal poll released last week found support for legal
abortion had grown nationwide since the court's decision and that more
than half of voters surveyed said the issue had made them more motivated
to vote in November.
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U.S. Senate candidate Mandela Barnes
addresses the media at a campaign event in Green Bay, Wisconsin,
U.S. September 6, 2022. REUTERS/James Oliphant
After voters in Kansas last month defeated Republican efforts to ban
abortion in that state, Democrats have zeroed in on women as the
voters most likely to help prevent a Republican takeover of
Congress.
The advocacy group Galvanize Action released nine digital ads about
abortion rights in Wisconsin aimed at moderate white women, one of
the state's largest voting blocs. The group has survey data that
says that those women, many of whom are not traditional Democratic
voters, can be persuaded to vote for a candidate who supports
abortion rights.
Jackie Payne, the group's executive director, said the ads' messages
revolve around compassion for women and keeping government out of
personal healthcare decisions.
"You have to connect to voters at their values," Payne said. "And
then get them to turn out."
Another group, Democratic Messaging Project, has posted a billboard
off a major highway in downtown Milwaukee that reads, "ABORTION
GONE, IS BIRTH CONTROL NEXT?," one of 10 billboards the group will
have in the state by week's end.
Nationally, Priorities USA Action, which targets swing voters in
battleground states, said half the ads it's running in states such
as Arizona and Pennsylvania mention abortion rights.
'FIRED UP'
Barnes, Wisconsin's lieutenant governor, released a TV ad in which
his mother spoke of having an abortion due to medical complications
that put her health at risk.
"It's about personal freedom that has been taken away by the Supreme
Court," Barnes said in an interview. "People are fired up."
His campaign believes Johnson, a two-term incumbent, is vulnerable
on the issue.
Johnson has said he supports making abortion illegal, with
exceptions for rape, incest and to protect the mother's health. He
has said he does not favor a federal abortion ban.
But Johnson's campaign rarely talks about abortion. Instead, it has
tried to pin Barnes to high crime rates in Milwaukee, branding him a
supporter of liberal criminal justice policies.
Analysts say Johnson may be more in danger than in past years
because of his support for former President Donald Trump's bogus
election fraud claims, which could alienate moderate voters. Polls
show a tight race.
Peggy Phillips, 66, who came out to see Barnes in Green Bay and
described herself as an independent, said she was leaning toward
backing the Democratic candidate. The main reason, she said, was
abortion.
"I believe very strongly that it's an individual issue," Phillips
said.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Daniel
Wallis)
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