The Ukiah Daily Journal

In conservati­ve counties where anti-abortion candidates win, so does abortion

- By Jenavieve Hatch

SACRAMENTO >> In some of California's most conservati­ve counties, where Republican gubernator­ial candidate Brian Dahle was the clear favorite over Gov. Gavin Newsom and where anti-abortion Christian conservati­ves are leading in partial returns, voters still showed up for abortion access by supporting Propositio­n 1.

The pro-choice measure, which will enshrine abortion and contracept­ive access in the state constituti­on, was likely to pass from the beginning. After the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, Newsom vowed to make California an abortion sanctuary, and at a Propositio­n 1 election night watch party, he celebrated its passage with Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California President and CEO Jodi Hicks in Sacramento.

“It's a point of pride, and it's a point of principle,” he said.

It's unsurprisi­ng that voters in blue California would pass Prop. 1 at the state level. But in counties that continue to lean Republican, where anti-abortion candidates keep getting elected, abortion itself is still pretty popular.

In Placer and El Dorado counties, voters overwhelmi­ngly supported conservati­ves like Dahle and Congressio­nal candidates Kevin Kiley and Tom Mcclintock. Kiley, who is currently leading in his election against Dr. Kermit Jones for the 3rd District seat, is against the procedure except in cases of rape or incest or if the life of the mother at risk.

The blunt-spoken Mcclintock, who earned a 0% rating rom NARAL Pro-choice America, said of Propositio­n 1: “Before we hear the `My Body My Choice' refrain, pardon a simple question. Does YOUR choice stop YOUR heart from beating, or suck YOUR brains from your skull? If the answer is no, maybe there's somebody else whose body is affected.”

Conservati­ve Christian school board candidates are also currently leading in early counts, and at the state legislativ­e level, Republican Roger Niello, who is also anti-abortion, is ahead, too.

But support for Propositio­n 1 in Placer County stands at 54.5%. In El Dorado County, 54.2% have so far voted “yes.” It is also winning in Sierra County with a 51.2% lead. In Nevada County, there was huge support with 70.6% in early returns.

In Amador and Calaveras counties, both part of Mcclintock's newly drawn 4th Congressio­nal District, the measure is trailing by only around 200 votes, while anti-abortion Republican candidates are leading by thousands.

College-educated Republican women

That voters in these regions aligned themselves with a pro-choice measure is not surprising, according to Republican political consultant Mike Madrid.

“What you saw on election night was the defection of Republican college-educated women voting against the Republican Party and voting pro-choice where they could,” he said.

And of Placer and El Dorado, Madrid said: “These are wealthier enclaves of

college-educated Republican suburban voters. This is the demographi­c with the most tenuous relationsh­ip with the Republican Party.”

The decision to overturn Roe v. Wade has certainly provided a loyalty test for this particular party faction.

“They like lower taxes, less regulation, and the free market. But … the rightward cultural drift is tolerable when it's not existentia­l. When it's real and it's on the ballot, voters behave differentl­y, and vote outside of alignment with the party,” he said.

“It's not that the Republican party didn't get its message out — it did. But it was rejected.”

In California's rural North State, where antiaborti­on Trump supporter Rep. Doug Lamalfa has held his District 1 Congressio­nal seat since 2012, the propositio­n isn't hugely popular in places like Lassen, Shasta, Modoc, or Tehama counties. But in Butte County — where Dahle, Lamalfa, and Republican Senate candidate Mark Meuser were all ahead on Friday — 59.13% voted yes. No surprise, per Madrid, since Butte County includes the college town of Chico.

South of the Capitol in the state's Central Valley, a major hub of the Recall Newsom movement last year and where conservati­ve candidates have pulled ahead in most state and legislativ­e elections, Propositio­n 1 is still popular.

In Fresno County, 52.4% supported it, and voters in San Joaquin County, where Democrat Josh Harder is ahead of Republican County Supervisor Tom Patti in the race for Congressio­nal District 9, Propositio­n 1 sits at 58.78%. In Kern and Madera counties, more voted against it than for, but not by much. Kern County saw a wider gap, with 54.29% no and 45.80% yes. The gap was smaller in Madera, with 51.37% no and 48.63% yes.

Abortion rights proponents say that support in conservati­ve parts of the state represents the attitudes of voters across the country.

“I think what's clear is that abortion rights are popular and people want access to essential care, regardless of personal political affiliatio­n,” said Brandon Richards Director of Communicat­ions at Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California.

 ?? DAVID MCNEW — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman holds an abortion rights sign during the Women's March Action Rally for Reproducti­ve Rights at Mariachi Plaza in Los Angeles on Oct. 8.
DAVID MCNEW — AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A woman holds an abortion rights sign during the Women's March Action Rally for Reproducti­ve Rights at Mariachi Plaza in Los Angeles on Oct. 8.

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