The Mercury

Abortion vote takes centre stage in US Senate

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DEMOCRATS in the US Senate were due to lead a vote yesterday to codify the right to abortion into federal law in a bid to pin down Republican­s on the deeply divisive issue ahead of crucial midterm elections, even though they expect the measure to fail.

The move comes amid a political firestorm ignited by a leaked draft opinion that showed the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority prepared to overturn Roe v Wade, a landmark 1973 ruling guaranteei­ng abortion access nationwide.

Chuck Schumer, leader of the Senate’s Democratic majority, told colleagues the vote would be “one of the most consequent­ial” in decades, describing the draft opinion as “one of the worst court decisions ever”.

“Before the day is over, every member of this body will make a choice: vote to protect the fundamenta­l rights of women across the country, or stand with five conservati­ve justices ready to destroy these rights,” he said.

The House-passed Women’s Health Protection Act would create a federal statute assuring health-care providers have the right to provide abortions and patients have the right to receive them. But the 60 votes needed to advance the debate towards a final yes or no vote in the evenly-divided, 100-member Senate are not there.

Even if they were, the Democrats don’t have the 51 votes required to pass the legislatio­n since Democrat Joe Manchin is opposed to abortion rights, and told reporters in Congress yesterday he would be voting no.

The only two Republican supporters of abortion rights, senators Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, opposed a near-identical earlier version along with Manchin.

The move is seen as significan­t, however, with abortion rights set to be a hot button issue for November’s midterm elections, when control of both the House and Senate will be at stake. A new Politico/ Morning Consult poll has 53% of voters saying Roe should not be overturned, up three percentage points since last week, while 58% said it was important to vote for a candidate who supports abortion access.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has suggested a federal abortion ban is “possible” if Roe is overturned. He later rowed back slightly, telling reporters that no abortion vote in the Senate had ever achieved the 60-vote threshold. But Democrats seized on the initial remark, arguing that highlighti­ng their disagreeme­nt with Republican­s could help them in the midterms, with most Americans supporting abortion rights.

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