Miami Herald

DeSantis predicts Florida will buck trend of voters supporting access to abortions

- BY ALEXANDRA GLORIOSO aglorioso@miamiheral­d.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

TALLAHASSE­E

After the Miami presidenti­al debate last November, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in an interview that anti-abortion activists have been getting their “clock cleaned” on referendum­s across the country securing access to the procedure.

But on Thursday during a press conference in Davie, DeSantis predicted Florida would buck that trend. He said voters would reject both Amendment 3 to legalize recreation­al marijuana and Amendment 4 to protect access to abortions.

“Once voters figure out how radical both of those are, they’re going to fail,” DeSantis said. “They are very, very extreme.”

DeSantis went on to compare Florida’s abortion ballot initiative to one approved by voters in

2022 in Democratic-stronghold California following the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that year overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

“And I think Florida voters over the past four or five cycles have developed a skepticism on these amendments, generally, because they’re always written in ways that are confusing,” said DeSantis, making an argument that Florida Supreme Court justices rejected when they voted to put abortion on the ballot. “You don’t necessaril­y know what the intent’s going to be.”

Florida’s abortion amendment will have the ballot title, “Amendment to Limit Government Interferen­ce with Abortion.”

Voters will see the following summary language for it: “No law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider. This amendment does not change the Legislatur­e’s constituti­onal authority to require notificati­on to a parent or guardian before a minor has an abortion.”

A HIGHER THRESHOLD IN FLORIDA TO PASS

To date, there have been four ballot referendum­s that have put the question of securing access to abortions directly to voters.

The proposals passed in all four states, including in 2023 in Ohio, where Republican­s control both the House and Senate and governorsh­ip, just like in Florida.

The abortion and marijuana referendum­s would amend the Florida Constituti­on and require a 60% majority to pass.

DeSantis’ office had yet to return a request for comments by the time of publicatio­n, but this higher-than-a-simple-majority threshold might be one reason why he is optimistic about Florida voters rejecting the amendments.

In

Republican-controlled Ohio, a state that is politicall­y similar to Florida, the referendum passed with 56.78% support.

Still, in DeSantis’ interview following the GOP debate last November — the day after Ohio voters approved access to abortions — he expressed concern about that vote.

“If you look at Ohio, a chunk of those voters would vote for Republican candidates, but if the issue is presented the way it is, they’re willing to vote for what, from a pro-life perspectiv­e, was a very extreme, very expansive pro-abortion amendment,” DeSantis said.

In Vermont, which has a Republican governor and a Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e, the amendment enshrining a “right to personal reproducti­ve autonomy” passed in 2022 with 76.77% support. A referendum in Michigan, another Democratic-controlled state, passed with 56.66% support in 2022.

Voters also rejected anti-abortion referendum­s in 2022 in Kansas and Kentucky. Both states have Democratic governors and Republican­controlled Legislatur­es.

OTHER STATES

There have been efforts in 12 states in addition to Florida to put constituti­onal abortion amendments in front of voters in the 2024 elections, according to the non-partisan, non-profit, healthpoli­cy group KFF.

So far, only the Florida and Maryland proposals will go to voters, said Mabel Felix, a women’s health-policy analyst for KFF by email on Thursday.

“The deadline to submit signatures in other states has not passed yet and other measures may be approved in the coming months,” Felix said.

“State lawmakers may also pass other measures.”

 ?? JASPER COLT USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis says Florida voters will reject a November ballot question to enshrine abortion access in the state constituti­on.
JASPER COLT USA TODAY NETWORK Gov. Ron DeSantis says Florida voters will reject a November ballot question to enshrine abortion access in the state constituti­on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States