Porterville Recorder

Democrats Say Abortion Is on the Line in Recall Election. But Rolling Back Rights Wouldn’t Be Easy

- By RACHEL BLUTH This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editoriall­y independen­t service of the California Health Care

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — As the election to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom approaches, abortionri­ghts groups are warning that California­ns’ right to an abortion is on the ballot.

Newsom, a Democrat, himself tweeted that “abortion access” is at stake.

“There’s no question that if a Republican is elected, access to abortion in California will be restricted,” Jodi Hicks, president of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, said at a press conference in July.

But this message is strategic and is more about firing up left-leaning voters than it is about policy, said Rob Stutzman, a Republican political strategist.

“There’s no indication from polling in this election that [abortion] is at all what California­ns think this election is about,” Stutzman said. “This fits into the type of campaign that they’re running, which isn’t persuasion; it’s motivation to turn out.”

In reality, California has some of the strongest abortion protection­s in the country and restrictin­g them would be difficult for a replacemen­t governor to accomplish with only a little over a year remaining in the term, opposition from an overwhelmi­ngly Democratic legislatur­e — and the right to abortion enshrined in the state constituti­on.

Although governors can veto legislatio­n, set budget priorities and make regulation­s through state agencies, only small-scale change would be possible and would almost exclusivel­y affect women on Medi-cal, the state’s Medicaid insurance program for low-income people.

“I don’t think abortion is going to be severely restricted in California,” said Laurie Sobel, associate director of women’s health policy for KFF. “It’s more subtle than just slashing laws that are on the books — it’s not being supportive” of progressiv­e new laws.

Restrictio­ns adopted by other states — such as laws that require ultrasound­s before abortions or regulation­s that make it hard to open abortion clinics — likely wouldn’t fly in California without a friendly legislatur­e, Sobel said.

Yet reproducti­ve rights groups have painted California­ns’ right to access abortion as threatened by the Sept. 14 recall election. Newsom appeared with Planned Parenthood leaders Wednesday night to say California’s role as an abortion-rights standard-bearer is more important than ever because other states are increasing­ly restrictin­g access and the U.S. Supreme Court will decide this year whether to uphold the seminal Roe v. Wade decision, which legalized abortion nationally.

None of the four leading Republican recall candidates responded to calls and emails about their positions on abortion.

Larry Elder, a conservati­ve radio host who is the leading replacemen­t candidate in most polls, has been the most outspoken on the issue. He has called abortion “murder ” and Roe v. Wade “one of the worst decisions that the Supreme Court ever handed down.” Businessma­n John Cox has called himself “pro-life” in previous campaigns, but said he prefers not to talk about social issues, and state Assembly member Kevin Kiley (R-rocklin) has received endorsemen­ts and positive ratings from anti-abortion groups. Former San Diego mayor Kevin Faulconer has said he supports abortion rights.

Every registered voter will receive a ballot in the mail, though voters will also have in-person voting options. If Newsom is recalled in the Sept. 14 election, his replacemen­t would take office in late October, and would serve the remaining portion of Newsom’s term, until January 2023. A replacemen­t could run for a regular four-year term in the November 2022 election.

State law establishe­s a woman’s right to an abortion, generally until a fetus could survive on its own. And the state constituti­on includes a right to privacy that the Supreme Court of California has ruled protects abortion, even if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade. The state Supreme Court has also struck down laws that limit abortion or require parental consent. State law requires every state-regulated health plan, public or private, to cover the procedure.

Still, abortion-rights advocates argue that having a right doesn’t always mean being able to access treatment, and that an anti-abortion governor could find ways to make the procedure less accessible. Experts say there are three primary ways a replacemen­t governor could restrict access:

Vetoing bills or budget items (the governor has lineitem veto power over the state budget) would be one of the most direct ways. State Sen. Lena Gonzalez (Dlong Beach) introduced a bill this year to eliminate cost sharing for abortion for Medi-cal patients, which awaits a committee hearing before heading to the Assembly for a final vote. She said she still would have introduced the measure under an anti-abortion administra­tion, but that it would have been an “uphill battle” on every front.

Democrats, who have a supermajor­ity in both houses of the legislatur­e, could override a governor’s veto with a two-thirds majority in both chambers. The last time that happened was in 1980.

Susan Arnall, director of outreach and engagement at the Right to Life League, said an anti-abortion governor could help bring balance to the Capitol by vetoing “anti-life” legislatio­n, even if lawmakers end up overriding the veto. “That at least delays things. It slows the process down, and that’s helpful,” she said.

Governors have broad power to change how Medical, which covers roughly half the abortions in the state, funds abortion.cal funds abortion. For instance, an anti-abortion governor could work through the Department of Health Care Services to set Medi-cal reimbursem­ent rates for abortion so low that no doctors could afford to perform the procedure. Or the governor could make the process of getting paid by Medi-cal so difficult that providers wouldn’t bother. These and other bureaucrat­ic hurdles could add up, making it harder for someone to get an abortion as quickly as they need one, said Fabiola Carrión, the National Health Law Program’s interim director of reproducti­ve and sexual health. “This is particular­ly a concern with people who live in central California and rural areas” where patients must drive long distances to find a provider. “Abortion is already a time-sensitive service.”

At the end of the year, the Food and Drug Administra­tion is expected to rule on whether mifepristo­ne, a prescripti­on drug used in medication abortions, can continue to be dispensed via telemedici­ne without seeing a provider in person — a service the agency approved provisiona­lly this year. If the FDA allows the telemedici­ne option to continue, it will require the state to update its Medi-cal provider manual. A new governor could install a director at the Department of Health Care Services who wouldn’t update the manual, and Medi-cal enrollees who want medication abortion might have to see their provider in person first.

“California already has abortion deserts within our own state,” Hicks said. Even a barrier that seems small “still matters for someone trying to get services.”

Democratic consultant Rose Kapolczyns­ki said the threat an anti-abortion governor could pose to abortion access is real, regardless of how long that person held office. Newsom’s replacemen­t would immediatel­y have to start running for reelection, she said, which provides the incentive to do big things in the first year.

“The Newsom team knows they need to do everything they can to motivate Democrats to mail in their ballots, and they’re talking to those voters about the issues they care most about,” Kapolczyns­ki said. “It’s completely legitimate to talk about what happens if the recall succeeds.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States