Toronto Star

Democrats aim to rouse voters

Party hopes focus on divisive issue will rally people to thwart red wave

- STEVE PEOPLES

Vulnerable Democrats from Nevada to New Hampshire are promising to make abortion a centrepiec­e of their political strategy heading into the midterm elections, betting that an intense focus on the divisive issue can rally their voters to beat back a red wave and preserve their narrow majorities in Congress.

Strategist­s in both parties suggest it may not be so easy.

Democrats have been sounding the alarm on abortion rights in nearly every election cycle this century, including last month’s stunning defeat in the Virginia governor’s race. In most cases, it’s Republican­s who have shown to be more motivated by the issue.

Still, as the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority signals a willingnes­s to weaken or reverse the landmark Roe v. Wade precedent, Democrats insist they can convince voters that the threat to women’s health is real and present in a way it wasn’t before.

“This isn’t crying wolf. This is actually happening,” Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, who is facing a difficult re-election test in Nevada, said. She took to the Senate floor Wednesday and warned, “The reproducti­ve freedom of women everywhere is in jeopardy,” before casting her Republican opponents as “anti-abortion extremists” in the interview.

The new intensity is prompted by the high court’s deliberati­on over a Mississipp­i law presenting the most serious challenge to abortion rights in decades. In nearly two hours of arguments Wednesday, the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority suggested they may uphold a Mississipp­i law banning all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy and possibly allow states to ban abortion much earlier in pregnancy.

Current law allows states to regulate but not ban abortion up until the point of fetal viability, at roughly 24 weeks.

The court’s final ruling is expected in June, just ahead of midterm elections that will decide the balance of power in Congress and in statehouse­s across the country.

Already braced for a rough year, Democrats have been searching for an issue that can both energize a base deflated by slow progress on various issues in Washington and repair the party’s strained relationsh­ip with suburban voters, who may be drifting back toward the GOP in the months since former U.S. president Donald Trump left office.

Abortion rights could be it, but it’s not necessaril­y a silver bullet, said Democratic pollster Molly Murphy, who recently surveyed voters across several battlegrou­nd states on the issue. “It’s the question I ask myself,” she said.

Democrats likely will not win on abortion if they simply recycle the arguments that Republican­s are trying to roll back abortion rights, Murphy said. To be successful, they must argue that Republican­s are spending their time and energy attacking women’s reproducti­ve rights at the expense of issues like the economy, the pandemic and health care. She also encouraged Democrats to focus on Republican-backed measures, like one in effect in Texas, that would penalize health-care profession­als and the women involved in some abortion cases.

Murphy’s guidance acknowledg­ed the nuances of public opinion on abortion rights.

A June AP-NORC poll showed 57 per cent of Americans said that in general abortion should be legal in all or most cases. But the same poll showed many Americans question whether a woman should be able to get a legal abortion “for any reason,” and most said abortion after the first trimester should be restricted.

In the second trimester, about a third said abortion should usually — but not always — be illegal, while roughly as many said it should always be illegal. And a majority — 54 per cent — said abortion in the third trimester should always be illegal.

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