The Morning Call

Abortion became driving force for many voters

Fall of Roe placed the issue front and center in campaigns

- By Corina Knoll and Mitch Smith

It was a driving force for a retired banker in San Antonio, an artist in Racine, Wisconsin, an event planner in Miami Beach. It motivated men and especially women. Even those who might usually skip a midterm election had been compelled to cast a ballot.

Across the nation, voters felt an obligation to weigh in on what, for many, was a vital matter: abortion rights.

“Abortion was my main, core issue,” said Urica Carver, 41, a registered Republican from Scranton, Pennsylvan­ia.

A single mother of six children, Carver, a caseworker for the state, said she would have most likely supported Republican­s in the midterms. But the Supreme Court’s decision in June to overturn Roe v. Wade magnified an issue that outweighed all others, she said.

Abortion, she said, was a personal decision, and she would want her own daughters to have the option if needed.

Carver voted a straight Democratic ticket.

“If they didn’t support that right, regardless of who they were,” she said, “they were not getting my vote.”

Abortion played a larger role in midterm results than even many Democrats, who had made it central to their campaigns, expected. Preelectio­n polls had shown Americans fixated on inflation and crime, with abortion still a concern but not as much of a priority.

Those opposed to abortion rights also said the issue moved them to vote.

But in states with ballot initiative­s that could affect abortion access, the issue drew more people who

supported abortion rights, or did not want more restrictio­ns.

In four states where abortion questions were on the ballot, voters chose to protect access to the procedure or reject further limits. And in some places where the future of abortion rights were uncertain, Democratic candidates who campaigned on the issue fared well — particular­ly in Michigan, where voters reelected Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, and in Pennsylvan­ia, where Democrat Josh Shapiro won the governorsh­ip and Democrat John Fetterman won the Senate race.

But even as abortionri­ghts supporters won several key races, there were limits on the issue’s impact.

In races in which voters were weighing multiple concerns, many Republican­s who have supported abortion limits prevailed, including in Florida, Georgia, Iowa,

South Dakota and Texas.

Voters who oppose abortion said they, too, were motivated to have their voices heard.

Addy Diaz, 59, of Miami Beach, said the election was about supporting Republican­s who would protect what she felt was a traditiona­l value.

“This is the reason we put these people in power, because they’re pro-life,” she said. “It’s what we’ve been waiting for a long time.”

In Kenosha, Wisconsin, Lupe Roginski, 43, a homemaker and nurse, said she voted for the Republican candidate for governor because of his opposition to abortion.

“That became the deciding factor for me — that he was pro-life,” said Roginski, whose candidate lost to the Democratic incumbent, Tony Evers, in a tight race. Abortion is illegal in Wisconsin, but Evers

supports abortion rights and has called for a ballot initiative to repeal the state’s ban.

The impact of abortion rights was clearest in states where the legality of the procedure was unsettled, including in Michigan, where a 1931 law banning the procedure remains on the books but had been temporaril­y blocked by a judge. Voters there decisively chose to add abortion protection­s to the state constituti­on Tuesday, while reelecting Whitmer and Attorney General Dana Nessel, Democrats who both campaigned on abortion rights.

“If we were to pick just one issue that made the biggest difference here, by far it’s abortion,” said John Sellek, a Republican public relations consultant in Michigan. He called Tuesday the “worst day in the modern Michigan GOP history.”

Stephanie Chang, a

Democratic state senator from Detroit, said she believed the abortion ballot question brought left-leaning voters to the polls who may not have voted otherwise.

“The Dobbs decision was devastatin­g, but in a way I think it was a wake-up call to a lot of people across our state and country,” Chang said, referring to the Supreme Court decision in June.

The issue also gained traction in California, where abortion is legal and the Democratic governor has vowed to help women from other states access abortion in the state.

In Berkeley, California, Susan Kopman, 75, said this year’s election took on a different tone in an area where residents were accustomed to liberal politics. Voters in California decided to add abortion rights to the state constituti­on.

Kopman said that she and almost everyone she knew had previously just accepted abortion as a human right and a fact of life.

“This makes me really sad to have to codify it in the constituti­on,” she said.

Voters in Vermont, another liberal state where abortion is already protected by law, also opted to add protection­s to their constituti­on.

Montana voters rejected a legislativ­e referendum that raised the prospect of criminal charges for health care providers unless they take “all medically appropriat­e and reasonable actions to preserve the life” of an infant born alive, including after an attempted abortion.

The resonance of abortion rights was not limited to Democratic voters.

In Kentucky, where Republican Sen. Rand Paul cruised to reelection, voters also rejected an attempt to amend the state constituti­on to say there is no right to abortion. That result keeps the door open to a legal challenge to Kentucky’s abortion ban that the state Supreme Court is scheduled to hear this week.

In August, in the country’s first major post-Roe test of abortion at the ballot box, Kansas voters overwhelmi­ngly rejected an attempt to remove abortion rights from their state’s constituti­on, a race that showed the political potency of the issue.

Ashley All, a senior adviser for Families United for Freedom, an abortion-rights group that was involved in the ballot questions in Kentucky, Michigan and Montana, said some Republican voters were also determined to protect abortion access.

“There were a lot of issues that were front and center but this one goes to core, fundamenta­l rights,” said All, the spokespers­on for the abortion-rights campaign in Kansas.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom, accompanie­d by his family, speaks after winning a second term in office on Tuesday in Sacramento. California voters overwhelmi­ngly decided to add abortion rights to the state constituti­on.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP California Gov. Gavin Newsom, accompanie­d by his family, speaks after winning a second term in office on Tuesday in Sacramento. California voters overwhelmi­ngly decided to add abortion rights to the state constituti­on.

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