GOP, Manchin block bill
Democrats tried and failed Wednesday to push forward legislation to safeguard abortion rights nationwide, as Republicans and one Democrat in the Senate blocked an effort to enshrine the landmark Roe vs. Wade precedent in federal law after a leaked Supreme Court opinion suggested it was about to be overturned.
With 51 senators opposed and 49 senators in support, Democrats fell short of the 60 votes they would have needed to take up sweeping legislation to guarantee abortion access and explicitly bar a wide array of restrictions.
The outcome was never in doubt, given the 50-50 split in the Senate and the deep partisan differences over abortion rights. But Democrats pressed ahead anyway, hoping that the vote would help them portray Republicans as extremists and persuade voters that they needed to elect more Democrats in November if they hoped to preserve abortion and other rights.
Republicans, who unanimously opposed the measure, were joined by one Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who broke with his party to vote against taking up the bill. Manchin, who opposes abortion rights, said the legislation was overly broad, noting that it would go substantially further than simply codifying Roe and warning that it would “expand abortion.”
The action pushed the issue out of the realm of policymaking in Washington, where congressional Democrats and President Joe Biden now lack a viable legislative path forward to preserve Roe, and to the forefront of the political debate with midterm congressional elections only months away.
Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, called the vote “one of the most important we’ve taken in decades.”
“Before the day is over, every member of this body will make a choice,” Schumer said Wednesday morning from the Senate floor. “Vote to protect the fundamental rights of women across the country or stand with five conservative justices ready to destroy these rights in one fell swoop.”
The Women’s Health Protection Act would have protected abortion access nationwide, going far beyond simply codifying Roe, the Supreme Court decision that in 1973 legalized abortion. It explicitly would prohibit a long list of abortion restrictions, including some that have been enacted by states since Roe was decided and that severely have limited access to the procedure.
Even as they work to avoid a backlash against their party before the midterms, Republicans did not shy away from the abortion debate Wednesday, seeking to cast the bill as radical and describing Democrats’ goal as legalizing abortion on demand at any stage of pregnancy with no limits.
“Today, Democrats have decided to line up behind an extreme and radical abortion policy,” Sen. Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., the minority leader, said Wednesday.
The legislation, he said, “goes way, way beyond codifying the status quo; it would roll back many existing laws.”
Sen. Susan Collins, R-maine, said the bill was championed by “far-left activists.”
Still, Democrats were on track to end the day with the headline they wanted voters to read: that Republicans had blocked their effort to safeguard abortion access. Polls show a solid majority of voters support abortion rights, although they also reflect substantial backing for at least some limits on the procedure.
Schumer was clear that short of passing legislation, he wanted to show Americans “where every single U.S. senator stands” on the issue. He warned Wednesday that if Republicans won control of the Senate in November, they would outlaw abortion nationwide.
“A national ban on abortion is the extreme of the extremes, and it is now possible in a Republican Senate,” he said, noting Mcconnell had said as much last week.