Abortion rights interests plow money into US election races after
Supreme Court reversal
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[June 24, 2024]
By Stephanie Kelly
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In the two years since the U.S. Supreme Court
overturned women's constitutional right to abortion, political
contributions aimed at protecting abortion rights have far outstripped
those to support anti-abortion causes.
In the 2023-2024 election cycle leading up to the Nov. 5 vote,
pro-abortion rights interests have given $3.37 million to federal
candidates, political parties, political action committees (PACs) and
outside groups, compared to about $273,000 from anti-abortion interests,
according to data from OpenSecrets, which tracks money in politics.
The level of spending by pro-abortion rights interests is expected to
offer a financial boost to the campaigns of some Democratic candidates
including U.S. President Joe Biden, who has made protecting abortion
rights a central part of his campaign message for reelection.
The Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, in 2022
overturned its 1973 Roe v. Wade precedent that had legalized abortion
nationwide, prompting 14 states to since enact measures banning or
sharply restricting the procedure.
Groups like super PACs received 65.8% of contributions from those
backing abortion rights in this election cycle, according to a Reuters
analysis of OpenSecrets data.
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Republican candidates and party committees got the bulk - about 75.9% -
of contributions from anti-abortion rights interests.
PACs are typically set up to gather funds for candidates or political
causes. They differ from outside money groups like super PACs, which can
receive donations of unlimited size but cannot coordinate with campaigns
directly.
So far this election cycle, PACs and super PACs allied with
anti-abortion causes have raised $3.54 million, while abortion rights
groups have raised $15.3 million, OpenSecrets data showed.
"The balance of spending between pro-abortion rights and anti-abortion
rights groups always reflected the fact that there are more people who
support abortion rights than who don't," said Mary Ziegler, a law
professor at University of California, Davis.
Ziegler said she would not be surprised if political donations to
support or oppose abortion rights rose for the 2024 election cycle
compared to the 2020 election cycle.
2020 ELECTION CYCLE SET RECORDS
The sums reported so far are dwarfed by those in the 2020 election
cycle, in which abortion rights interests poured in $11.33 million in
political contributions, with spending in the 2022 midterm election
cycle coming in second with $10.67 million in contributions, OpenSecrets
data showed.
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Anti-abortion demonstrator Edgar Alvarez faces off with pro-abortion
rights activist Nadine Seiler outside the U.S. Supreme Court as
justices issue orders in pending appeals in Washington, U.S., June
21, 2024. REUTERS/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/File Photo
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Contributions from anti-abortion interests totaled $6.41 million in
the 2020 cycle, and $2.7 million in the 2022 midterm cycle, during
which the outcomes for ballot measures and competitive races seemed
to suggest that voters were eager to protect abortion access at the
state level.
With more than four months to go before the November election, it
remains to be seen whether contributions this election cycle from
abortion rights and anti-abortion causes will outstrip those in the
2020 cycle, when Biden beat the incumbent Donald Trump, a
Republican.
The impact of political contributions on race outcomes is
complicated, Ziegler said, as voters have various priorities at the
ballot box.
"You can't dismiss the importance of it, but it's not like (more
contributions) definitely means ballot initiatives are going to
pass, Democrats are going to win, etc. It's not that simple,"
Ziegler said.
During Trump's term as president, which started in 2017, he
appointed a third of the current members of the Supreme Court and
half of its conservative bloc, with all three of his picks coming
from a list compiled by conservative legal activists.
Trump's campaign earlier this month said he supports the rights of
states to make decisions on abortion, supports exceptions for
abortions in cases of rape, incest and life of the mother, and also
supports protecting access to contraception and in vitro
fertilization.
Two of the top contributors to candidates and groups are Planned
Parenthood - which advocates for abortion rights - and Susan B.
Anthony Pro-Life America - which lobbies against abortion rights.
So far this election cycle, Planned Parenthood has contributed $2.53
million, most of that to liberal groups, the Democratic party and
its candidates.
Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America has contributed about $92,600,
almost all of it to Republican candidates and their party.
(Reporting by Stephanie Kelly; Editing by Heather Timmons and Deepa
Babington)
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