Houston Chronicle Sunday

Every vote in America, at every level, is now about abortion

- Mary Sanchez SYNDICATED COLUMNIST Mary Sanchez is a columnist for the Tribune Content Agency.

The pro-choice jubilation that overtook the state of Kansas is beginning to subside, as all victorious celebratio­ns eventually do. What’s less clear is if the revelers fully grasp that they’re still running against howling headwinds.

This is despite the overwhelmi­ng support Kansans showed for reproducti­ve rights in the Aug. 2 vote. At about a 60/40 split, voters deep-sixed an amendment that would have opened the door to a conservati­ve Kansas legislatur­e intent on restrictin­g abortion.

Nothing about the vote stops those legislator­s from testing out new limits in an attempt to re-raise the issue in the courts.

The battle to regain reproducti­ve rights in Kansas and in America has barely begun. And Kansas is more of an anomaly than what will be the norm in most states.

Come November, voters in only four other states will see abortion explicitly on the ballot in similar ways, as a question about their state’s constituti­on: California, Michigan, Vermont and Kentucky.

Most Americans will encounter it less directly through the views of politician­s campaignin­g on multiple issues.

Indiana provides proof. The Hoosier state became the first to illustrate a post-Roe v. Wade reality.

Indiana’s legislatur­e banned abortion from conception, with few exceptions. It was a battle for GOP moderates to pass exceptions for rape, incest, lethal fetal abnormalit­ies and the health of the mother.

Executives of the Indianapol­is-based Eli Lilly and Company reacted quickly, issuing threatenin­g statements that the drug maker expects the new restrictio­ns to limit its recruitmen­t and growth plans.

“Given this new law, we will be forced to plan for more employment growth outside our home state,” read the company’s statement.

But will those same Lilly upper-income bracket, C-suite executives punish legislator­s in re-elections? Or might they rationaliz­e a vote to protect tax cuts, ensure less regulation or invite incentives to augment the company’s bottom line?

Corporate executives aren’t exactly known to be singleissu­e voters.

Ditto for the members of the Indy Chamber of Commerce, which also expressed dismay, calling the new law “reckless.”

This happened mere days after Kansas voters resounding­ly demonstrat­ed what surveys show: Most Americans support access to abortion, within limits.

And yet, this doesn’t matter as much as pro-lifers wish.

This is a harsh demoralizi­ng truth. But the sooner the prochoice side accepts the situation, the sooner they will be on firm ground to act.

The most sobering interview I’ve conducted in recent months was with a University of Kansas professor who has studied abortion laws for decades.

Professor Alesha E. Doan,

50, does not believe she will see reproducti­ve rights restored within her lifetime. This reason is the political landscape of gerrymande­red districts. These include districts of hyper-conservati­ve state legislatur­es and conservati­ve appellate judges, and are rigid against easy unwinding.

This groundwork was put into place over decades, while most pro-choice voters weren’t paying attention. The assumption, among the pro-choice crowd, was that the right to an abortion was safely enshrined in the federal Roe v. Wade ruling.

Sure, journalist­s regularly reported on the step-by-step erosion of reproducti­ve rights, of various politician­s taking it up as a single issue and the politiciza­tion of religious views that place life at conception. Yet those stories weren’t enough to raise the big red flag, which quickly sprang up when the Supreme Court indicated it was likely to overturn Roe v. Wade in a leaked memo in early May.

That momentum from the shock and backlash of that memo and the eventual ruling helped organize new and longtime voters around the Kansas vote. That all-hands-on-deck energy won’t be replicated easily, even by November.

Here’s the new rule: Every vote is about abortion.

A governor can either veto or sign into law what the legislatur­e passes. The secretary of state oversees elections and processes that put those state officials into office, the retention of judges will be in play as they will lean toward upholding bans or reproducti­ve rights, the attorney general can decide how fervently the office will defend state laws.

For those still fuzzy on how Roe v. Wade was overturned, this is how it happened: Democrats and pro-choice voters believed that the right to an abortion, with limits, was sealed by Roe v. Wade. Meanwhile, anti-abortion forces were slowly and very adeptly altering the political landscape to undercut the historic ruling.

Regaining that ground demands using the same playbook, one that was almost expertly practiced by religious conservati­ves.

Faith plays the long game.

It’s the strong suit of the most fervently religious, among whom we find many anti-abortion stalwarts. The latter patiently restructur­ed the makeup of the nation’s courts and many of its legislatur­es. They did so with a single-minded resolve.

Pro-choice voters will only gain back some leverage by adopting the focused brand of patient diligence that the religious right used to achieve its aim.

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