USA TODAY International Edition

Kansas abortion vote could foretell trouble for GOP

- Candy Woodall

WASHINGTON – Kansas voters turned out in droves Tuesday and shook up the nation’s political landscape when they issued the first ballot response since a Supreme Court ruling in June sent the abortion issue back to the states.

One of the most conservati­ve states voted to protect abortion access, which has been threatened by the high court’s landmark decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, the case nearly five decades earlier that had establishe­d abortion as a constituti­onal right.

The primary vote in Kansas, where the robust turnout was more in line with a general election for governor or president, was a litmus test and warning sign for Republican­s counting on the flagging economy being the issue that will motivate voters most in the midterm elections in November.

As Democrats double down on their abortion messaging in midterm races,

here are highlights from the Kansas abortion vote:

● What they voted for: Kansans gave a resounding “no” – 59% to 41% – to a ballot question that essentiall­y asked whether abortion rights should be stripped from the state constituti­on, which would have cleared the way for lawmakers to impose more regulation­s and restrictio­ns. The state allows the procedure up to 22 weeks of pregnancy. Voting “yes” would have been in line with lawmakers and advocates who wanted to overturn a state Supreme Court ruling in 2019 that upheld abortion rights and ensure the Kansas Constituti­on no longer protected abortion.

● Brisk turnout: Primary turnout in a midterm year usually hovers between 30% and 40% in Kansas. Secretary of State Scott Schwab, a Republican, said early Tuesday evening that turnout was on track to be 63%. Voters of various ages in both parties – including staunchly conservati­ve areas President Donald Trump carried by double digits in the 2020 race – chose to support abortion rights. The turnout was more impressive considerin­g the state doesn’t allow mail- in ballots or much early voting.

● Caveats: The result captured voter sentiment for the first time since the Roe decision, but the narrow question asked on the ballot didn’t show the many nuances of the abortion issue. Polling shows the majority of voters say abortion should be legal under certain circumstan­ces, not any circumstan­ce, and they want exceptions for rape, incest and the health of the mother. The economy is another big caveat for November – especially if it worsens.

What the vote means

If the turnout in Kansas is replicated across the country in November, it would benefit Democrats, who count on the Roe reversal to improve their odds. The party faces high consumer prices, President Joe Biden’s low approval numbers and a historical record that shows midterms typically go against the sitting president’s party.

Jarrolyn Quinones, 65, a paralegal, was “stunned” by the vote in her home state, she told USA TODAY late Wednesday morning.

As a Democrat in conservati­ve Kansas, she thought she might be on the losing end of the referendum.

Her polling place in Sedgwick County, which includes Wichita, the state’s largest city, had a lot of posters outside for the anti- abortion campaign, she said.

The results taught her something: The abortion issue cuts through partisan politics. Women who feel the same way she does about abortion rights might not have signs in their yard or be from the same political party, but they were aligned at the ballot box.

“Women understand their rights are being taken away ... and if they don’t act, we will be back in the 1950s,” Quinones said. “Regardless if women have different political beliefs or different religious beliefs, they agree they want the right to make their own choices.”

Sedgwick County voted 58% to 42% to protect abortion rights in Kansas. Trump won the county by nearly 12 percentage points over Biden in 2020.

Many voters are too young to have lived when Roe wasn’t the law of the land.

Quinones remembers life before Roe and wants to protect abortion access for her family.

“My life would be entirely different if Roe wasn’t in existence,” she said. “I don’t want to have my granddaugh­ters growing up in a world where they don’t have a choice.”

What’s at stake

The midterm elections in November will decide which party controls Congress.

Democrats control the White House and, narrowly, the U. S. House and Senate.

Republican­s have a strong chance to take back the House and could take back the Senate, which is split 50- 50. Vice President Kamala Harris, a Democrat, is the tiebreakin­g vote.

Tuesday afternoon, before the Kansas vote, Harris reminded supporters, “We can make a difference in the outcome of the midterms.

“We are seeing extremist, so- called leaders around the country at a local, state and federal level who are pushing an agenda that is about the restrictio­n of rights instead of what we are supposed to stand for, which is about progress and the expansion of rights,” she said. “We know what we stand for, so we know what to fight for.”

“Women understand their rights are being taken away ... and if they don’t act, we will be back in the 1950s. Regardless if women have different political beliefs or different religious beliefs, they agree they want the right to make their own choices.” Jarrolyn Quinones Paralegal in Kansas

Democrats have a voter registrati­on advantage in some battlegrou­nd states. For example, the Senate race in Pennsylvan­ia between Democrat John Fetterman and Republican Mehmet Oz could determine which party controls the upper chamber of Congress.

The Kansas vote indicates Republican women may support candidates who back abortion access, regardless of political party.

“This vote makes clear what we know: The majority of Americans agree that women should have access to abortion and should have the right to make their own health care decisions,” Biden said in a statement late Tuesday.

However, the president and his party could be judged in November on the basis of the economy.

Inflation hit a 40- year high of 9.1% in June, and economic forecasts suggest it will remain high in the fall when voters go to the polls.

Analyst Dave Wasserman, U. S. House editor of the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report, said Wednesday afternoon that the Kansas vote was just the beginning of this month’s primaries.

He pointed to special elections in Minnesota on Aug. 9, Alaska on Aug. 16 and New York on Aug. 23 as races to measure the impact of the Supreme Court ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on that overturned Roe.

“Although Kansas sent a loud message, the final margins in upcoming special elections ... will be much more instructiv­e of the post- Dobbs environmen­t for the fall,” he said.

 ?? EVERT NELSON/ AP ?? Democratic state Rep. Stephanie Clayton celebrates the result of Kansas’ abortion vote.
EVERT NELSON/ AP Democratic state Rep. Stephanie Clayton celebrates the result of Kansas’ abortion vote.
 ?? TAMMY LJUNGBLAD/ THE KANSAS CITY STAR VIA AP ?? Cassie Woolworth and Dawn Rattan, right, attend a primary watch party Tuesday in Overland Park, Kan.
TAMMY LJUNGBLAD/ THE KANSAS CITY STAR VIA AP Cassie Woolworth and Dawn Rattan, right, attend a primary watch party Tuesday in Overland Park, Kan.

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