Post-Tribune

Exactly where abortion will be on the ballot in 2024

- By Julianna Goldman

The abortion rights issue was a political lifesaver for Democrats this year. Whether it will be again in 2024 depends in part on efforts to put the question of reproducti­ve rights on the ballot — not just through the candidates’ positions, but literally.

The issue helped to fend off a red wave by both firing up the base and persuading undecided voters. Restrictiv­e abortion laws are out of touch with public opinion, made clear the six out of six times voters were asked about the issue in Vermont, California, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Kansas. Now abortion activists are asking which other states are ripe for initiative­s to protect reproducti­ve rights.

For Democrats, the stakes are higher. In 2024, they will be playing defense not only with the White House but also with 23 Senate seats (including two independen­ts). Republican­s, meanwhile, have only 10 Senate seats to defend, most in red states.

As the fight over abortion rights plays out, watch Missouri and Ohio — where efforts are further along. The questions are whether and how reproducti­ve-rights groups move forward with ballot initiative­s, and what sort of resistance they face from their pro-life counterpar­ts.

Depending on the state, there are a number of ways measures can get on the ballot. Legislatur­es can produce ballot initiative­s that either restrict or enhance abortion rights. Legislator­s in New Jersey, for example, are looking into a ballot measure for next year to enshrine abortion rights in the state constituti­on.

Another way is for citizens to petition to get measures on the ballot. That’s an option in 22 states plus the District of Columbia; of those, only in 17 can a ballot measure modify the state’s constituti­on. That’s what happened in Michigan, when voters this year establishe­d abortion rights as part of the state’s constituti­on, reelected Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and put Democrats in control of the state Legislatur­e for the first time since 1984.

In Ohio, the stakes are high for threeterm Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown, who is up for reelection in 2024. The state is solidly red, but nearly 60% of registered voters would support codifying abortion rights in the state’s constituti­on. On the ground, abortion access is in litigation.

After the Supreme Court overturned

Roe v. Wade in June, the state Legislatur­e enacted a law banning abortion after six weeks. In October, a state court blocked that ban. That ruling is being appealed. And after November’s elections, says Jessie Hill, a professor at Case Western University who has been fighting the law, the

Ohio Supreme Court has an anti-abortion majority.

If the court reinstates the ban, Hill says, “the only response to that would be a ballot initiative.” One complicati­ng factor, she notes, is that Ohio’s Republican secretary of state has proposed a bill that would make it more difficult for citizen-led initiative­s to get on the ballot.

In red states, Hill says, the data suggest it’s easier to get people to vote against an abortion ban than to get them to vote in favor of an abortion rights amendment. That was the case in Kentucky and Kansas, where voters rejected abortion bans. How an amendment is phrased, she says, is crucial: whether to go broad and propose a blanket protection of abortion, or to use more narrow wording, for example to protect abortion only in the first trimester, in an attempt to appeal to more people.

Abortion proponents and foes are also eyeing Missouri, where there is a total complete ban on abortion. In two years, there will be races for governor and secretary of state. Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, a Trump ally who won with 51.4% in 2018, is also up for reelection.

The state has a history of ballot initiative­s. This year, 53% of voters supported one legalizing marijuana. In 2018, 62% approved a minimum wage hike. In 2020, they approved Medicaid expansion.

It’s clear why Republican­s, who have a majority in the state legislatur­e, are pushing efforts to make the initiative petition process more onerous.

Abortion rights activists began looking into state ballot initiative­s before the midterms. They’re polling in several states and mining available voter data in Kansas, Michigan and Kentucky. They are also working with groups like the Fairness Project , a progressiv­e organizati­on that helps develop and organize ballot measures, to determine what’s viable, raise money and draft language.

Kelly Hall, the Fairness Project’s executive director, acknowledg­es there may be “coattail effects” from ballot measures that benefit Democratic candidates in 2024.

But she also makes clear that the priority is protecting abortion rights: “Our view is let’s not let the tail wag the dog,” she says.

If there are coattails, they’re ones Democrats can and should be chasing.

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