Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Midterms reinforce Christian voter trends on abortion, GOP

- By David Crary, Peter Smith and Nuha Dolby

In the midterm elections, evangelica­l Christians across the nation reconfirme­d their allegiance to conservati­ve candidates and causes, while Catholic voters once again showed how closely divided they are — even on abortion.

On a successful, highprofil­e ballot measure in the battlegrou­nd state of Michigan, proposing to enshrine abortion rights in the state constituti­on, Catholic voters split about evenly, according to AP VoteCast, an expansive survey of more than 94,000 voters across the country.

In Kentucky, a reliably Republican state, voters rejected a GOP-backed ballot measure aimed at denying any state constituti­onal protection­s for abortion. Among those voting No were 60% of Catholic voters, according to VoteCast.

In contrast, about twothirds of white evangelica­l voters in both Kentucky and Michigan voted against protecting abortion access.

‘Hardest loss’

Albert Mohler, president of Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, said rejection of that measure in his state was an “unmitigate­d disaster.”

He was less surprised by abortion-rights amendments passing in more liberal Vermont and California and centrist Michigan. But the Kentucky vote was the “hardest loss” and followed a similar vote in August in another red state, Kansas.

Mohler said it’s important for abortion opponents to be willing to enact their views into policy.

Voters “who voted for pro-life candidates turned around and voted against a pro-life constituti­onal amendment,” Mohler lamented.

On the opposite side of the fight, Catholics for Choice president Jamie Manson said abortion access protection­s are popular.

“In red states and blue states, with religious voters and secular voters, wherever abortion was on the ballot, abortion rights disproport­ionately won,” she said in a statement.

John Fea, a professor of American history at Messiah University in Mechanicsb­urg, Pennsylvan­ia, said the Kentucky vote signaled that many Americans seem to want the status quo provided under the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision. It legalized abortion nationwide — with some limits — until it was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in June.

“Most of the country wants some restrictio­ns on abortion, but they don’t want bans,” Fea said. “The Christian right, despite the fact that they got what they wanted with the overturnin­g of Roe, is not getting the extent of the victory they had hoped.”

Only about one in 10 voters nationwide and across most states say abortion should be illegal in all cases, according to AP VoteCast. Even among white evangelica­l voters, while most say abortion should generally be illegal, only about two in 10 say abortion should be illegal in all cases.

Some high-profile wins

Despite setbacks on the ballot measures, abortion opponents took heart from some other election results. Michael New, who teaches social research at The Catholic University of America, cited the comfortabl­e re-election victories for GOP Govs. Greg Abbott in Texas, Brian Kemp in Georgia, Ron DeSantis in Florida and Mike DeWine in Ohio.

“All these governors signed strong pro-life laws and did not hide from the abortion issue,” New said.

According to VoteCast, about 4 in 10 Catholics voting in the midterm elections identified as Democrats; about half as Republican­s. A breakdown of some high-profile races for governor and for U.S. Senate illustrate­d how these voters are very much a swing constituen­cy.

In Wisconsin, Catholic voters slightly favored Republican­s in those two races.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Catholics were slightly more likely to have voted for the Republican loser in the Senate race, Mehmet Oz, but more likely to vote for the Democratic winner in the governor’s race, Josh Shapiro. Oz is Muslim and Shapiro is Jewish.

In Arizona, Catholic voters were evenly divided between the Democratic and Republican candidates for governor, while about 60% backed Democrat Mark Kelly, seeking re-election to the Senate. The tight races in Arizona remain uncalled by The Associated Press.

In each of those three states, roughly two-thirds or more of white evangelica­l Christian voters backed the GOP candidates.

Another notable factor in these results: large majorities of voters who describe themselves as nonreligio­us voted for the Democrats and supported abortion rights in their decisions on the Michigan and Kentucky ballot measures.

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