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‘Democracy voters’ delivered for Democrats

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WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden tried to shape the midterm elections not as a verdict on his time in office, but rather on the contrast between Democrats and Republican­s on American democracy.

“We’ll have our difference of opinion. And that’s how it’s supposed to be,” Biden said in remarks days before the Nov. 8 elections. “But there is something else at stake: democracy itself.”

The election results reveal both the potential and the problems with Biden’s argument for motivating voters. In states such as Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia, voters could look at their ballots and see a clear contrast between Democrats and Republican candidates who falsely claimed the 2020 presidenti­al was rigged.

And yet, the notion of democracy is open to interpreta­tion, one that encompasse­s feelings about one’s own identity, political rivals, the news media and broader social changes. Democrats held the Senate, while Republican­s are one seat shy of a House majority with votes still being counted.

Biden’s message resonated with many Democratic voters, AP VoteCast shows, and maybe even helped Democrats to defy gravity in key states in the midterms, which historical­ly have resulted in major losses for the party that holds the White House.

But the nationwide survey of more than 90,000 voters also shows many Republican­s similarly considered the future of democracy to be their motivating factor this year, and Democratic candidates didn’t exclusivel­y win the democracy vote.

Overall, VoteCast reveals Democratic voters were much more likely than Republican­s to call the future of democracy their “single most important” factor in voting, with more than half of Democrats saying so. Still, about a third of Republican­s identified democracy as their top considerat­ion.

Across the country, Democratic congressio­nal candidates won roughly 6 in 10 voters who said the future of democracy was their “single most important” factor, while about 4 in 10 backed Republican candidates.

That gap appears to have been critical in some of the most competitiv­e races for U.S. Senate and governor this year, setting up a stronger than expected performanc­e by Democrats.

In Pennsylvan­ia, Democrats John Fetterman and Josh Shapiro appeared to outperform Democratic House candidates nationwide, earning about twothirds of the “democracy vote.”

Shapiro bested for governor Republican Doug Mastriano, who commission­ed buses for people to attend the rally that preceded the Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol. Fetterman flipped an open Senate seat against Republican Mehmet Oz, who won a rough GOP primary in large part because of former President Donald Trump’s endorsemen­t.

Biden made Pennsylvan­ia the epicenter of his midterms push, going there 11 times this year, more than any state other than his home of Delaware.

The president gave a Sept. 1 speech in front of Philadelph­ia’s Independen­ce Hall speech where he said “equality and democracy were under assault.” He said the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol by Trump supporters “put a dagger to the throat of our democracy” by trying to prevent the peaceful transfer of power.

Also getting about two-thirds of the “democracy vote” were Democrats Mark Kelly and Katie Hobbs in Arizona. Running for governor, Katie Hobbs beat Republican Kari Lake, a former local TV news anchor who embraced Trump’s denial that he lost his re-election bid two years ago.

Arizona Republican Senate candidate Blake Masters had language on his website that claimed the 2020 election was stolen, but he removed it after winning the primary and lost to the incumbent Kelly.

In Michigan, too, where Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer outpaced Republican Tudor Dixon by about two to one among those who considered democracy their chief considerat­ion.

The democratic issue also dovetailed with the Supreme Court decisions that overturned Roe v. Wade and returned the issue to the states. In his speeches about democracy, Biden specifical­ly cited abortion bans as a policy goal of the Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement.

Michigan had a ballot issue to preserve access to abortions. About 3 in 4 voters called the Roe reversal an important factor in their vote. Of that group, two-thirds supported Whitmer.

But in other battlegrou­nd states where Republican candidates edged out Democrats and in solidly red states, the democracy vote wasn’t as clearly a Democratic vote.

In red-state Kansas, where Republican Sen. Jerry Moran and Democratic Governor Laura Kelly both won reelection bids, the democracy vote responded differentl­y to the two candidates. In the Senate race, voters who singularly prioritize­d democracy slightly preferred Moran over his Democratic challenger Mark Holland. But Kelly won about 6 in 10 of them in the governor’s race. Meanwhile, Republican­s had a strong showing in both Florida and in Texas, and VoteCast shows they earned more of the democracy vote than GOP congressio­nal candidates nationwide. Close to half of voters who said the future of democracy was their top factor voted for Sen. Marco Rubio and Governor Ron DeSantis in Florida, and for Governor Greg Abbott in Texas.

In Ohio, democracy voters clearly favored Governor Mike DeWine, who won his reelection by a wider margin than JD Vance, the Republican winner in the race for Senate. In the Senate race, those who said democracy was their chief considerat­ion went for the Democratic candidate, Rep. Tim Ryan.

Candidates on both sides of the aisle earned the backing of these voters because Republican­s and Democrats have very different things in mind when they said the future of the nation’s democracy was their single most important factor.

Compared with other Republican­s and with democracy Democrats, democracy Republican­s nationwide were especially likely to be “angry” with the way the federal government is working and to say their vote was intended to express support for Trump; about half of democracy Republican­s said each.

About 7 in 10 democracy Republican­s identify as supporters of the MAGA, movement, and about as many said Biden was not legitimate­ly elected president in 2020. About half said they were not confident that midterm votes would be counted accurately.

Meanwhile, about two-thirds of democracy Democrats said the Supreme Court overturnin­g Roe made them “angry,” more than the percentage of other Democrats or democracy Republican­s who said that.

About three-quarters of democracy Democrats said they meant their vote as an expression of opposition to Trump; about 6 in 10 said their vote was intended to support Biden.

Many Democratic voters didn’t let their reservatio­ns about Biden keep them from supporting the president’s party, a sign that the issues at stake might have mattered as much as who was in the White House.

Just 43% of voters approved of Biden’s leadership, while 57% disapprove­d. Among voters who backed Democratic House candidates, 18% disapprove­d of the president.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press ?? With the U.S. Capitol in the background, people walk past a sign that says say, “Voters Decide Protect Democracy,” on Jan. 6, in Washington. Last week's ballot had an unspoken candidate, American democracy. Two years of relentless attacks on democratic traditions by former President Donald Trump and his allies left the country's future in doubt, and voters responded. Many of the candidates who supported the lie that Trump won the 2020 election lost races that could have put them in a position to influence future elections. But the conditions that threatened democracy's demise remain, and Americans view them from very different perspectiv­es.
Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press With the U.S. Capitol in the background, people walk past a sign that says say, “Voters Decide Protect Democracy,” on Jan. 6, in Washington. Last week's ballot had an unspoken candidate, American democracy. Two years of relentless attacks on democratic traditions by former President Donald Trump and his allies left the country's future in doubt, and voters responded. Many of the candidates who supported the lie that Trump won the 2020 election lost races that could have put them in a position to influence future elections. But the conditions that threatened democracy's demise remain, and Americans view them from very different perspectiv­es.

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