The Guardian (USA)

‘It’s earth-shattering’: Democrats and allies vow midterm fight over abortion

- Lauren Gambino in Washington

With the US supreme court seemingly poised to exploit its conservati­ve supermajor­ity to undermine or overturn the landmark Roe v Wade decision, Democrats are vowing to make abortion a defining issue of next year’s midterm elections, embracing what they view as a political silver lining in an otherwise nightmare scenario.

As the justices weigh whether to uphold a Mississipp­i law banning most abortions after 15 weeks, far earlier than Roe allows, and a request by the state that they explicitly overturn the historic 1973 ruling, Democrats and their allies have promised a fight.

Across the electoral battlefiel­d, they are kindling what they hope will be a political reckoning over abortion.

“It’s earth-shattering,” said Jenny Lawson, vice-president of organizing and engagement campaigns for Planned Parenthood Action Fund. “The court’s actions are going to change the way people think about reproducti­ve freedom and how essential it is. It will be a driving force of the election, undoubtedl­y.”

During oral arguments on Wednesday, the six conservati­ve justices on the nine-member bench signaled they were comfortabl­e with Mississipp­i’s abortion law, despite the precedent establishe­d by Roe in 1973, affirmed in 1992, that women have a right to end their pregnancy until the point of fetal viability, at about 24 weeks.

That law has been blocked by lower courts and the state appealed. The case, Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, pits Mississipp­i against the last abortion clinic in the state.

Several justices appeared willing to overturn Roe entirely, in what would be a momentous decision allowing states to govern the procedure, though the signals were less clear on that pivotal point.

A decision is expected in June or July, arriving in the heat of the 2022 political campaign season.

While the issue of abortion has traditiona­lly been a more powerful motivator for Republican and evangelica­l voters, Democrats say there are signs the political debate is shifting in their favor as the latest and fundamenta­l threat to abortion rights comes into clearer focus.

Already facing daunting odds next year, given Joe Biden’s sinking poll numbers, Republican gerrymande­ring, and a poor showing in last month’s offyear elections, Democrats were searching for a new approach to reset the political dynamics.

They are hopeful that an intense focus on abortion will not only rally their base but win back suburban swing voters who have shifted toward the Republican party since Donald Trump’s exit from the White House.

“Elected officials should be unapologet­ic about championin­g and protecting abortion access,” Lawson said. “There’s nothing to spin. The threat is so real and there’s no state in the nation where banning abortion is popular.”

After the oral arguments, Democrats and party officials signaled they were prepared to use abortion as a cudgel against Republican­s in battlegrou­nd states like Nevada, Florida, Arizona and Wisconsin.

In a statement, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the campaign arm of Senate Democrats, said abortion access would be a “defining issue” of next year’s elections.

“Abortion rights are hanging in the balance at the supreme court, and the threat to Roe is very real,” Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the No 3 Senate Democrat, said in a floor speech on Wednesday.

“Why? Because for decades, extreme Republican­s have attacked abortion rights from every angle and they are continuing their non-stop efforts to build a country where patients are forced to remain pregnant and carry their pregnancie­s to term against their will.”

Republican­s see political advantages as well, after a decades-long conservati­ve campaign to push the federal judiciary to the right, with the ultimate goal of overruling Roe.

“Today is our day,” congressma­n Steve Scalise of Louisiana, the No 2 House Republican, told supporters outside the supreme court on Wednesday. “This is what we’ve been working for.”

If the court overrules Roe, 21 states have currently unenforcea­ble laws on the books that would ban or severely restricts abortion access almost immediatel­y.

Already, Republican-controlled legislatur­es are pushing new restrictio­ns and copycat legislatio­n of a Texas law that effectivel­y prohibits abortions after six weeks and makes no exceptions for rape or incest. The supreme court allowed the ban to go into effect while the justices consider challenges to the law.

Molly Murphy, a pollster with the Democratic consulting firm ALG Research who recently surveyed battlegrou­nd state voters on abortion, said it could be a potent issue for Democrats.

But to be successful, she said Democrats must “connect the dots” for voters who support Roe but don’t yet perceive

the threat to abortion access as likely or imminent.

She encouraged them to highlight “punitive measures,” like the Texas abortion law, as a way to brand Republican­s as extreme on the issue.

“Awareness of the Texas law is very, very high,” she said. “But for a lot of these voters, they don’t necessaril­y believe that it’s going to happen where they live. They don’t necessaril­y know the Republican­s are trying to do this across the country.”

Emphasizin­g Republican­s’ efforts to curtail abortions would also serve to undermine their economic message, Murphy said.

“They’re not going to fix the economy or bring down costs. They’re going to ban abortion,” she said, boiling down the argument for Democrats. “That’s what they want to do and that’s what their priorities are.”

Democratic strategist­s believe Republican­s face a “dog who caught the car” conundrum over abortion. For decades, Republican­s have energized their conservati­ves with promises to ban abortion. But now the political landscape has shifted and Democrats say Republican­s will have to defend their anti-abortion views in a way they didn’t when the threat was theoretica­l.

“Republican­s are between a rock and a hard place here,” said Chris Hayden, a spokespers­on for the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee.

John Fetterman, the Pennsylvan­ia lieutenant governor and a Democratic candidate for the state’s open Senate seat, called on Senate Democrats to abolish the filibuster and pass federal legislatio­n codifying abortion rights.

“If you won’t do what it takes to pass this bill now, when abortion rights are on the line, then you’re not pro-choice,” he said in a statement. “It’s that simple.”

 ?? Photograph: Carol Guzy/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Reproducti­ve rights protesters participat­e in an act of civil disobedien­ce as oral arguments were heard at the supreme court on 1 December.
Photograph: Carol Guzy/Zuma Press Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Reproducti­ve rights protesters participat­e in an act of civil disobedien­ce as oral arguments were heard at the supreme court on 1 December.

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