New York Daily News

Pro-choice Dem wins Ala. elex by 25 points

- BY DAVE GOLDINER

A Democratic candidate won a swing seat in the Alabama statehouse by a whopping 25-point margin in a race dominated by the controvers­y over Republican efforts to ban abortion and in vitro fertilizat­ion.

Marilyn Lands (photo), who campaigned on a strongly pro-choice platform, won a special election to fill the suburban Huntsville 10th District seat, turning around a race that she lost by about 7 points in 2022.

The surprising win came amid widespread concern even in deep-red Alabama about the state’s anti-abortion push, which led the state’s Supreme Court to recently issue a ruling that effectivel­y banned IVF in the state.

The election result won’t shift the partisan balance in ruby-red Alabama, where Republican­s still hold supermajor­ities in both branches of the legislatur­e as well as every statewide elected office. Former President Donald Trump romped over President

Biden by a 25-point margin across the state.

But the result suggests that Democrats are likely to continue amplifying concern over threats to reproducti­ve rights, including abortion medication, IVF and even contracept­ion, to secure big gains among suburban women and moderate and independen­t voters.

Pro-choice candidates and Democrats have enjoyed a big edge over Republican abortion opponents for two years now since the U.S. Supreme Court unexpected­ly overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide.

The anti-abortion ruling opened the door for most Republican-run states to ban nearly all abortions, sparking outrage among the more than 60% of Americans who believe abortion should mostly be legal.

Pro-choice referendum­s swept to victories even in red states like Kansas and Ohio, while many political pundits credit the issue with helping Democrats avert a much-hyped red wave in the 2022 midterms.

In Alabama, pro-life voters passed a state constituti­onal amendment declaring that life starts at conception.

The measure was intended to permanentl­y ban all abortions in the state. But it also cast a long shadow over IVF, which involves fertilizin­g many of a woman’s eggs and discarding most of them.

Citing the plain language of the constituti­onal amendment, the all-Republican Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen fertilized eggs are people, a ruling that could open up parents, doctors and other medical officials to prosecutio­n for supposedly killing them.

Alabama state lawmakers quickly moved to pass a new law to explicitly permit IVF.

But some anti-abortion zealots object to the law and support the idea that a fertilized egg is a human life, suggesting that they may file a new lawsuit to block IVF in the state.

The abortion rights issue is a concern for Trump and his 2024 Republican campaign.

Trump often brags about engineerin­g the repeal of Roe v. Wade because he appointed three conservati­ve justices to the U.S. Supreme Court.

He recently suggested he will back a national ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. But he privately acknowledg­es that the issue is a political “loser.”

Coincident­ally, the Alabama vote came on the same day that the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments over a Christian conservati­ve effort to ban mifepristo­ne, a commonly used abortion medication.

The justices appeared to be leaning toward avoiding a ruling on the ban itself by invoking a legal technicali­ty of whether the doctors who sued were personally affected by the use of mifepristo­ne.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States