Houston Chronicle Sunday

Arizona battlegrou­nd is heating up

- By Steve Peoples and Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX — Arizona was already expected to be one of the most closely contested states in November’s U.S. presidenti­al election, but a ruling this week institutin­g a near-total abortion ban supercharg­ed the state’s role, transformi­ng it into perhaps the nation’s most critical battlegrou­nd.

This Sunbelt state with a fierce independen­t streak has long been at the forefront of the nation’s immigratio­n debate due to its 378-mile border with Mexico and its large Hispanic and immigrant population­s. It now moves to the center of the national debate over reproducti­ve rights after the U.S. Supreme Court ended a federally guaranteed right to abortion.

Abortion and immigratio­n have been two of this year’s biggest political issues. No battlegrou­nd state has been affected more directly by both than Arizona.

“Do not underestim­ate this,” Democratic pollster John Anzalone, who polls for President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign, said of the Arizona abortion ruling. “It’s dynamic-changing.”

Biden and presumptiv­e Republican nominee Donald Trump are expected to fight hard to win Arizona after Biden carried the state four years ago by less than 11,000 votes.

In addition to the presidency, the U.S. Senate majority may be decided by the state’s high-profile contest between Republican Kari Lake and Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego in the race to replace retiring Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, an independen­t who caucuses with Democrats.

The state Supreme Court’s ruling reviving an abortion ban passed in 1864 also added rocket fuel to Democrats’ push to add a question to the November ballot asking voters to approve a constituti­onal amendment protecting the right to abortion until viability, when a fetus could survive outside the womb. Later abortions would be allowed to save the woman’s life or protect her physical or mental health.

Trump campaign senior adviser Chris LaCivita, who also serves as chief of staff to the Republican National Committee, described Arizona as “a key part of the strategy.”

He declined to discuss any specifics on strategy but disagreed that the abortion ruling fundamenta­lly changed Arizona’s dynamics.

“Is abortion an issue that the campaign has to deal with in the battlegrou­nd states — and more specifical­ly in Arizona? Absolutely. We feel that we are doing that and we are exceeding what we need to do,” LaCivita said, even as he suggested other issues would be more salient for most Arizona voters this fall.

“The election is going to be determined really in large part based on the key issues that the vast majority of Arizonans have to deal with every single day, and that’s, ‘Can I afford to put food on the table and feed my family and get in the car to go to work?’ ” he said.

Democrats are quick to note that they have won virtually every major election in which abortion was on the ballot since the June 2022 reversal of Roe v. Wade.

The Biden campaign on Thursday launched a statewide abortion-related advertisin­g campaign that it said would reach seven figures, although ad tracking firms had yet to confirm the new investment. The new ads come in addition to a $30 million nationwide advertisin­g blitz that was already underway, according to Biden campaign spokesman Kevin Munoz.

In the new ad, Biden links Arizona’s abortion restrictio­ns directly to Trump.

“Your body and your decisions belong to you, not the government, not Donald Trump,” Biden says. “I will fight like hell to get your freedom back.”

Beyond the ad campaign, Vice President Kamala Harris appeared in Arizona on Friday to highlight the Democrats’ dedication to preserving abortion rights.

Even without this week’s abortion ruling, Democrats were already betting big on Arizona this fall.

Biden’s team is on track to spend more than $22 million on Arizona advertisin­g between April 1 and Election Day, according to data collected by the ad tracking firm AdImpact. That’s millions more than other swing states like Wisconsin, Georgia and Nevada. Only Pennsylvan­ia and Michigan are seeing more Democratic advertisin­g dollars.

Trump’s team, meanwhile, isn’t spending anything on Arizona advertisin­g this month and hasn’t yet reserved any general election advertisin­g in the state, according to AdImpact.

Yet Trump remains bullish on the state, which had backed a Republican presidenti­al candidate in every election since 1996 before it narrowly supported Biden in 2020. They point to a modest shift among Hispanic voters, a core group in the Democratic coalition, which may be more open to Trump.

Anzalone, the Biden pollster, warned his party against overconfid­ence.

“It’s not going to be easy. These are all close races. I’m not getting ahead of myself in any way,” he said of the fight for Arizona this fall. “But we like the advantage we have there.”

 ?? Grace Trejo/Associated Press ?? Vice President Kamala Harris addresses a campaign event Friday in Tucson, Ariz., blaming former President Donald Trump for eroding abortion rights.
Grace Trejo/Associated Press Vice President Kamala Harris addresses a campaign event Friday in Tucson, Ariz., blaming former President Donald Trump for eroding abortion rights.

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