Loveland Reporter-Herald

The Chicago Tribune on how the GOP’S abortion loss in Ohio confirms it’s out of step with America:

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Ever since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Republican­s have been repeatedly shooting themselves in the foot when it comes to grappling with the highly charged issue of abortion. They did it again in Ohio last week.

The GOP tried to pull a fast one, asking voters in the Buckeye State to approve a measure that would have raised the threshold to amend the state’s constituti­on from a simple majority to 60% support. Ohio GOP lawmakers who put the measure on the ballot smoke-screened their real intent by pitching it as a bid to firewall the amendment process from deep-pocketed special interests.

The gambit didn’t work. It clearly was all about torpedoing a ballot initiative slated for November that would beef up Ohio’s state constituti­on with an amendment protecting abortion rights. Turnout among Ohioans for last week’s vote was massive — almost twice as large as it was for last year’s primaries for governor and legislativ­e races. And instead of neutralizi­ng the push to codify abortion rights, the GOP measure emboldened it by forging a coalition of liberal Democrats, independen­ts and moderate Republican­s who believe in a woman’s right to choose.

Now Republican­s may see Ohio join California, Michigan and Vermont as states that have amended their constituti­ons to protect abortion rights. In 10 other states, pro-abortion rights advocates are trying to get abortion protection amendments added to state constituti­ons.

When will the GOP learn?

The Supreme Court’s overturnin­g of Roe in June 2022 upheaved the American political landscape in a way that continues to confound Republican­s and imperil their chances for success in 2024. It may well be that the incongruou­s coalition of liberals, swing voters and moderate Republican­s behind the GOP defeat in Ohio serves as a microcosm for what the party faces next year.

And as long as the GOP tries to double down on its campaign to curb or eradicate abortion rights state by state, it can expect the backlash against that effort to steadily grow.

Previous recent wake-up calls have gone unheeded by Republican­s . ...

Our position on abortion is clear. After the overturnin­g of Roe, we wrote, “A woman’s right to make her own reproducti­ve health decisions shouldn’t be subjected to political trade winds.” We agreed with Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, who in their dissent in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on wrote that under Roe v. Wade, “the government could not control a woman’s body or the course of a woman’s life: It could not determine what the woman’s future would be.”

Nationally, the Republican Party finds itself caught between its base, which adamantly opposes abortion, and the majority of Americans, who believe in a woman’s right to choose. With a pivotal 2024 election on the horizon, that’s an unenviable place for the GOP to be, a place that puts the party on a path toward defeat.

The way forward for Republican­s is clear. The GOP must moderate its stance on abortion and find a place under its tent for suburbanit­es, center-right Republican­s and independen­ts who do not espouse Trumpian toxicity and refuse to countenanc­e the party’s all-out, guns-blazing attack on the pro-abortion rights segment of America. If it fails to do that, the GOP in 2024 may find itself in an even more ominous state of disarray than it finds itself right now.

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