The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Can abortion save Democrats?

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After the Supreme Court reversed the Roe decision and ended a national right to abortion, President Joe Biden quickly seized the political opening. “This fall, Roe is on the ballot,” he insisted. “Voters need to make their voices heard.”

Every survey agrees that Democrats have a winning issue. USA Today found that 61% of voters oppose overturnin­g Roe, with only 28% supporting the court. According to Gallup, 55% call themselves “pro-choice,” with 39% identifyin­g as “pro-life.”

Biden’s message might be popular, but the messenger is not. In an average of national polls, Biden has sunk to a favorable rating of 39.6%. That’s more than 2 points below Donald Trump at the same stage of his presidency, and almost 7 points below Barack Obama.

With inflation raging out of control, and aftershock­s from the pandemic still rippling through peoples’ lives, 7 in 10 Americans say the country is headed down the wrong track, with only 22% believing we’re going in the right direction.

Can the president and the Democrats change the subject from the price of gas to the rights of women? Can they convince voters to bury their disappoint­ment with the current administra­tion and focus on their fears of the last one?

The Democratic game plan is already clear: Use the abortion issue to remind swing voters why they abandoned Trump.

That’s why party talking points use words like “extremism” and “dangerous” as often as possible. And why they are highlighti­ng the most outlandish Republican proposals for what happens next — Mike Pence wanting to ban all abortions nationwide, or Justice Clarence Thomas threatenin­g to outlaw contracept­ion and same-sex marriage.

“This is insanity,” came a typical statement from Rep. Tim Ryan, the Democratic nominee for Ohio’s open Senate seat. “This level of extremism is not going to play in Ohio.”

Cheri Beasley, running for the Senate in North Carolina, warned, “I hope you all know that this doesn’t end this, that the threats don’t stop here.”

Contributi­ons to Democratic candidates and abortion-rights groups have spiked sharply, and Democratic pollster Jeff Horwitt tells NBC, “How it (abortion) plays out in November is to be determined, but for now, it is injecting some muchneeded enthusiasm into parts of the Democratic coalition.” For now.

But two huge obstacles stand in the Democrats’ way, beyond the historical trend that a president’s party almost always loses Congressio­nal seats in off-year elections. The first is that Democrats have been far less successful than Republican­s in using the Supreme Court as an issue to mobilize voters.

Look at 2016. Four out of five evangelica­l Christians backed Trump, even though he’d been married three times, never went to church and boasted about his sexual escapades. One key reason was that he promised to pack the federal courts with judges who would overturn the Roe decision. By contrast, many liberals abandoned Hillary Clinton, because she wasn’t pure enough on their issues, no matter whom she would appoint to the court.

Conservati­ves embraced Trump despite his flaws, because they understood elections have consequenc­es. Many liberals rejected Clinton because of her blemishes. As a result, they bear some of the blame for the demise of Roe.

Instead of learning from their grievous errors, those liberals seem poised to repeat them. A Washington Post headline blares, “Frustratio­n, anger rising among Democrats over caution on abortion,” and the story quotes leftists like Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez denouncing Biden for a litany of sins, including his failure to back schemes that would rebalance the court with added judges or end the filibuster and pass legislatio­n enshrining abortion rights in federal law.

The national mood is an even bigger hurdle. Many people might feel passionate­ly about the abortion issue on both sides, but it remains an abstractio­n. Inflation affects every family every day. That’s why an NBC survey finds only 33% approving of Biden’s handling of the economy, and 65% saying their family’s income is falling behind the cost of living.

Abortion looks like a potent weapon for Biden and the Democrats. But is it enough to sway voters who feel “really, really down”? Probably not.

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