Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In Waukesha County, a campaign for Biden, abortion rights

Effort to turn red area into purple one spotlights suffering caused by bans

- Jessica Van Egeren

MENOMONEE FALLS − Tina Kanetzke was surprised when she learned two women who had experience­d poor medical care in states with near-total abortion bans were traveling to Menomonee Falls to campaign for President Biden.

Kanetzke said voters like her are “still in the minority” in Waukesha County, part of the state’s Republican stronghold of three counties that include Ozaukee and Washington and are commonly referred to as the “WOW” counties.

“I think the street would have been filled with protesters had people in town known this was going on,” Kanetzke said.

Instead, Appleton Avenue was free of protesters as a small group of voters gathered Monday evening at Batter & Mac to hear Kaitlyn Joshua, of Louisiana, and Amanda Zurawski, of Texas, describe how their lives were negatively impacted by the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade in 2022.

The gathering of mostly women in the northwest Milwaukee suburb is a targeted move by the Biden campaign to reach suburban women, who especially in Waukesha County, have long been a trusted base for the Republican Party.

There are signs that is changing. According to an analysis by the Journal Sentinel of three Marquette Law School polls over the past nine months, former President Donald Trump is much more popular among Republican voters in the small towns and rural counties of northern and western Wisconsin than he is among Republican voters in the cities and suburbs of metro Milwaukee and Madison.

Across metropolit­an Milwaukee and Madison, a large minority in his party (anywhere from 27% to 44%) view Trump negatively. These areas are home to around 40% of self-identified Republican­s and Republican-leaning independen­ts in the state. This includes Waukesha County.

“It is not going to be an easy road, but we are seeing inroads and the county is turning more purple,” said Danielle Scampini Linn, a resident of Elm Grove. “Year to year it ticks up a little bit. I don’t think the demographi­cs are changing. I think the engagement is changing.”

A recent Wall Street Journal poll of battlegrou­nd state voters, including

“In suburban counties like the WOW counties it will make a difference.”

Danielle Scampini Linn resident of Elm Grove

Wisconsin, found 39% of suburban women cite abortion as their make-orbreak issue, leading Waukesha County residents like Linn to find even more reason for the county to continue its trend toward residents voting for Democrats.

Linn is also a founding member of Motherhood for Good, a liberal organizati­on that helped get the word out about Monday’s event. She sees abortion as a make-or-break issue that will drive voter engagement.

“In suburban counties like the WOW counties it will make a difference,” Linn said Monday.

Abortion will be the issue that determines how Kanetzke votes in November, too. She said until Roe was overturned,

“It is not going to be an easy road, but we are seeing inroads and the county is turning more purple. Year to year it ticks up a little bit. I don’t think the demographi­cs are changing. I think the engagement is changing.”

Danielle Scampini Linn resident of Elm Grove

leaving it up to individual states to set abortion laws, she never felt she had to make it her priority issue. Now she does.

Trump campaigned in 2016 with the promise to overturn Roe v. Wade and, once elected, nominated three conservati­ve justices to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Trump campaign released an ad last week in which Trump took credit for overturnin­g Roe v. Wade and said it’s “now up to the states to do the right thing.”

Trump’s statements on abortion have changed multiple times over the years.

Rachel Lee, a spokeswoma­n with the Republican National Committee, said in a statement to the Journal Sentinel that Trump “could not have been more clear.”

“These decisions should be left to the states to determine by vote or legislatio­n or perhaps both,” Lee said.

Zurawski and Joshua argue a patchwork of varying abortion laws from state to state is dangerous and provides substandar­d care for pregnant women.

Those who attendance at Monday’s event heard how Joshua, while between 10 and 11 weeks pregnant, was turned away from three medical centers while she was having a miscarriag­e in Louisiana. She said Monday that doctors were fearful to perform the necessary procedure — a dilation and curettage, or D&C — to end her pregnancy. The procedure is the same as an abortion.

Zurawski learned when she was 18 weeks that her baby girl was not going to survive the pregnancy. Rather than immediatel­y induce her to end the pregnancy, doctors waited three days for her to develop an infection and go into septic shock, a life-threatenin­g condition that allowed doctors to only then perform an abortion to “save the life of the mother” she said. She was twice placed in the intensive care unit.

She said after she recovered she struggled with saying she had an abortion.

“Now I don’t have a problem saying it,” she said. “The more we talk, the more we de-stigmatize the word.”

Monday’s event was the first of four that will be held in Wisconsin this week.

Craig Gilbert contribute­d to this report.

 ?? EBONY COX / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? From left, Motherhood For Good founding member Erin Phillips, Kaitlyn Joshua of Louisiana, Amanda Zurawski of Texas and Motherhood For Good founding member Danielle Scampini Linn speak during a town hall at Batter & Mac in Menomonee Falls on Monday as Joshua and Zurawski campaign on behalf of President Joe Biden this week in Wisconsin.
EBONY COX / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL From left, Motherhood For Good founding member Erin Phillips, Kaitlyn Joshua of Louisiana, Amanda Zurawski of Texas and Motherhood For Good founding member Danielle Scampini Linn speak during a town hall at Batter & Mac in Menomonee Falls on Monday as Joshua and Zurawski campaign on behalf of President Joe Biden this week in Wisconsin.

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