Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Texas race tests abortion’s resonance with voters

- By Paul J. Weber

SAN ANTONIO » By the time Dr. Hector Gonzalez arrived in Laredo, Texas, in 2001, the last abortion clinic had already closed. He spent the next 20 years experienci­ng firsthand where the largely Hispanic and heavily Catholic community along the border with Mexico usually sided.

“Definitely it was, ‘No abortion,’” said Gonzalez, the city’s former public health director.

That culture has helped protect the region’s nineterm congressma­n, Henry Cuellar, who is one of the last anti-abortion Democrats in Congress. But he’s facing the stiffest challenge of his career on Tuesday in a runoff election against progressiv­e rival Jessica Cisneros, a 28-year-old immigratio­n attorney who supports abortion access.

With the U.S. Supreme Court poised to potentiall­y overturn abortion rights in a ruling this summer, the runoff is being closely watched for clues about whether the issue will animate Democratic voters. An infusion of money that outside groups have poured on the ground and across TV in South Texas is an indicator of an important race, with abortion rights advocates trying to lower expectatio­ns about broader implicatio­ns.

“National trends are not set by one election and not determined by one election,” said Laphonza Butler, president of Emily’s List, which backs women who support abortion rights and has endorsed Cisneros.

Regardless, the race will provide insight about the direction of the Democratic Party. Progressiv­es have scored some notable wins so far this primary season, defeating a moderate candidate in last week’s Senate primary in Pennsylvan­ia and potentiall­y unseating an incumbent congressma­n in Oregon, where vote counting is still underway.

Eager to protect an incumbent, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has stood by Cuellar even as she reaffirms her staunch support of abortion rights. Rep. Jim Clyburn, the third-ranking Democrat in the House, campaigned with Cuellar in Texas this month, saying the most important priority should be keeping the seat in the party’s hands. Cisneros, he argued, was at risk of losing to a Republican.

Still, a leaked draft of the court’s ruling in April has shaken up what was already a close — and increasing­ly costly — race. In the March primary, Cisneros finished roughly 1,000 votes behind Cuellar, forcing the runoff after neither candidate met the majority threshold to win outright. It was as close as Cuellar has come to losing his 17-year grip on the seat.

But the runoff has also illustrate­d the uphill climb America’s abortion rights movement faces this fall in mounting an all-out attack on opposing incumbents — a challenge that is on display even here in a solidly Democratic region, to say nothing of the fight ahead in Republican-leaning districts.

The outcome could reveal the limits of abortion as a

galvanizin­g issue for voters. National polling before the leaked draft found abortion trailing other concerns, including high inflation and gun control.

“People here are pretty liberal,” said Martha Cerna, 76, a retired schoolteac­her in San Antonio who supports abortion access. “But the further south you go in Texas, the worse it gets.”

Cerna lives in a slice of Cuellar’s district that is more than a two-hour drive north of his hometown of Laredo. She had showed up early in downtown San Antonio for an abortion-rights march and took shade from the blazing South Texas sun in a plaza outside City Hall, where the current mayor and a predecesso­r, former presidenti­al candidate Julian Castro, are outspoken for abortion rights.

Cisneros joined the march, but Cerna said the voters around here aren’t the ones who need convincing. “That’s why I think it’s going to be a hard sell for her,

because there will be some Democrats that are going to want to go with Cuellar,” she said.

Cisneros, who once interned for Cuellar but now carries the endorsemen­ts and agenda of Democrats’ left wing, has leaned into the contrast over abortion in the final weeks.

When a grand jury in South Texas indicted a woman on murder charges in April over a self-induced abortion, it happened in one of the district’s rural counties. The charges were swiftly dropped after drawing national outrage, but Cisneros pointed to it as a case of prosecutio­n for seeking health care.

“When we take the time to talk to people about what it really means to be prochoice, meaning believing government shouldn’t be in the middle of these type of private decisions and seeking abortion, then people usually realize that they’re pro-choice,” she said in an interview.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, walks to the stage during a campaign event, Wednesday in San Antonio. Cuellar, a 17-year incumbent and one of the last antiaborti­on Democrats in Congress, is in his toughest reelection campaign, facing a May 24primary runoff against progressiv­e Jessica Cisneros.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, walks to the stage during a campaign event, Wednesday in San Antonio. Cuellar, a 17-year incumbent and one of the last antiaborti­on Democrats in Congress, is in his toughest reelection campaign, facing a May 24primary runoff against progressiv­e Jessica Cisneros.

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