The Guardian (USA)

Tuesday’s primaries offered a glint of hope for Democrats this fall

- Lloyd Green

Republican candidates from Arizona to Pennsylvan­ia ought to worry. On Tuesday, voters in Kansas rejected efforts to gut a woman’s right to choose. In 2020, Donald Trump trounced Joe Biden there 56-42. Two years later, an anti-choice referendum went down in defeat 59-41. Suburban moms and dads had thundered; turnout soared. The supreme court’s wholesale attack on Roe backfired.

The competing opinions authored by Justices Alito, Thomas and Kavanaugh may gift the Democrats a twoseat gain in the Senate, and doom Republican pick-ups of governorsh­ips in Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia. Grasp more than you can hold, and you will be left with nothing, the Talmud says. On primary day, the high court’s decision in Dobbsseems to have energized plenty of otherwise loyal Republican­s. By the numbers, 65% of Americans believe the constituti­on enshrines a right of privacy even as they hold doubts about abortion.

Trump-endorsed Senate hopefuls JD Vance (Ohio), Mehmet Oz (Pennsylvan­ia), Herschel Walker (Georgia) and Blake Masters (Arizona) must now answer for the Republican­s’ war on autonomy. Vance also wants to ban pornograph­y as he gives a greenlight to guns and embraces Marjorie Taylor Greene. He claims smut harms fertility rates.

A recent Fox News poll shows Democrats with double-digit leads in Pennsylvan­ia’s Senate and governor’s races. Doug Mastriano, the Keystone state’s Republican gubernator­ial candidate, came under recent fire for his embrace of Christian nationalis­m and ties with antisemiti­c figures. And Dr Oz is Dr Oz.

Tudor Dixon, the Trump-backed winner of Tuesday’s Michigan Republican gubernator­ial primary, believes that a 14-year-old raped by a relative should be forced to carry her pregnancy to term. “Yeah, perfect example,” she told an interviewe­r.

Her remarks now are a centerpiec­e of incumbent Democrat Gretchen Whitmer’s re-election efforts. Dixon opposes exceptions to an abortion ban in cases of rape and incest. She trailed Whitmer by 11 points in a July poll.

The Michigan Right to Reproducti­ve Freedom Initiative may also appear on the fall ballot. Once upon a time opponents of Roeclaimed the ruling was wrong because it was “antidemocr­atic”.

Adding fuel to this Great Lakes dumpster fire, Matt DePerno, Michigan’s prospectiv­e Republican attorney general, openly mused about re

stricting accessibil­ity to contracept­ion. At a Republican debate, he questioned the validity of Griswold, the pertinent 1965 supreme court ruling. For good measure, DePerno previously spearheade­d efforts to undo Biden’s 150,000vote win in Michigan.

Tuesday’s contests were also about the 45th president exacting revenge and promoting the “big lie” – that he was defrauded of victory.

To be sure, not all Republican­s were buying what the former guy was selling. But he had greater success than Kansas’s pro-lifers. Trumpism remains very much alive.

In the state of Washington, incumbents Jaime Herrera Beutler and Dan Newhouse stand on the verge of rebuffing primary bids by Trump-endorsed challenger­s. Both Representa­tives Herrera Beutler and Newhouse voted to impeach the ex-reality show host over his role in the January 6 insurrecti­on.

On the other hand, Michigan’s Representa­tive Peter Meijer, who voted for Trump’s impeachmen­t, lost to John Gibbs, a Trump-backed challenger. Gibbs had received a boost from congressio­nal Democrats, as part of an audacious strategic move to empower Republican­s they think will lose in the general elections. Meijer, a supermarke­t chain scion, lost by four points.

With the rightwing Gibbs as the Republican nominee, the Democrats may actually pick up a House seat. Had Meijer emerged with the Republican nod, he would have been favored. All this raises the question of whether Democratic talk about putting the country ahead of party is partisan blather.

Elsewhere, Trump claimed the head of Republican Rusty Bowers, the outgoing speaker of the Arizona senate. He had opposed efforts to overturn the 2020 election, and appeared before the January 6 select committee.

Days after Bowers testified, Trump declared: “Bowers must be defeated, and highly respected David Farnsworth is the man to do it.”

Farnsworth believes that Satan stole the 2020 election. Really.

“This is a real conspiracy headed up by the devil himself,” he explained at a debate.

Along with Farnsworth, Mark Finchem, a diehard election denier and conspiracy theorist, notched the Arizona Republican nomination for secretary of state. He too had Trump’s blessing.

As for the state’s Republican primary for governor, Kari Lake holds a two-point lead with more than 80% of precincts reporting. Like Finchem and Farnsworth, Lake garnered a Trump endorsemen­t and rejects Biden’s legitimacy as president. Whether she actually wins the primary and can prevail against Democrat Katie Hobbs, the current secretary of state, remains to be seen.

With Kansas’s resounding no vote, Democrats have good reason to make abortion a major issue for the midterms. Of course, as Republican­s learned on Tuesday, it is all too easy to go off the deep-end.

Lloyd Green is a regular contributo­r and served in the Department of Justice from 1990 to 1992

 ?? Photograph: Tammy Ljungblad/AP ?? ‘In 2020, Donald Trump trounced Joe Biden in Kansas 56-42. Two years later, an anti-choice referendum went down in defeat 59-41.’
Photograph: Tammy Ljungblad/AP ‘In 2020, Donald Trump trounced Joe Biden in Kansas 56-42. Two years later, an anti-choice referendum went down in defeat 59-41.’

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