Abortion key issue for both parties in 2022
When the Supreme Court rules in the coming months on the Mississippi and Texas laws substantially restricting abortions, it will do more than decide the future of its 1973 ruling legalizing a woman’s right to end her pregnancy.
It will almost certainly plunge the long-simmering issue into the midst of the 2022 midterm congressional and gubernatorial elections at a time both Democrats and Republicans believe it could help them.
One is likely to be wrong. Or, perhaps, each will be right in some places and wrong in others.
Ever since the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, abortion rights has been a potent factor in many national and state elections.
But polls on which party benefits are as complicated as those on the attitude of Americans toward the practice itself.
For example, 2020 television network election exit polls showed a majority of voters favored keeping abortion generally legal. They also showed the proportion regarding the issue as an important factor in their vote was roughly the same among supporters and opponents of abortion rights, about three in five.
Still, Donald Trump’s 2016 promise to name Supreme Court justices opposed to abortion rights — and the fact that by 2020 he had done so — likely helped to maintain his strong support from religious conservatives.
A recent Quinnipiac University Poll showed Texans agreed by a 2-to-1 margin with the court’s 1973 ruling legalizing abortions, about the same degree of overall support as has been shown in most national polls.
But the same poll showed opinion evenly split on the provision in the state’s new law that makes abortions illegal when a fetal heartbeat is detectable. That provision would ban abortions after the first six weeks of pregnancy, rather than the 26 weeks currently allowable under the Supreme Court decision.
At the same time, the survey showed strong opposition among Texans to the new law’s provisions allowing private citizens to sue anyone they suspect may have facilitated an illegal abortion and to the provision including in the abortion ban any pregnancies resulting from rape or incest.
According to the Guttmacher Institute, a women’s rights and reproductive rights support organization, 19 states have passed a total of 106 restrictive measures this year, hoping they would pass muster with the newly reconfigured Supreme Court that now has a solid conservative majority because of Trump’s appointments of three justices critical of abortion rights.
The court has agreed to consider a Mississippi law, which would ban most abortions after 15 weeks. It also stepped into the controversy surrounding the even more restrictive Texas law, allowing it to take effect pending a ruling on its constitutionality, though even some conservative legal experts consider it unconstitutional unless the court is ready to reverse the 1973 ruling.
In this circumstance, there are two great uncertainties: how far the court will go in restricting its 1973 ruling, assuming that is why it took these cases. And which side will benefit politically.
Democrats believe the issue will spur a larger-than-usual turnout of suburban women that will help their candidates in next year’s elections. That sort of turnout was a key factor in the Democrats’ recapture of the U.S. House in 2018 and the presidency in 2020.
Similarly, many Republicans believe it helped to elect Trump in 2016 — and nearly re-elected him in 2020 — by generating an outpouring of religious conservatives.