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Former President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he would "protect" women "whether the women like it or not," a comment the Harris campaign immediately pounced on. "I said, 'Well, I’m going to do it, whether the women like it or not,'" Trump said. A Harris campaign spokesperson, Sarafina Chitika, also said on X that Trump "thinks he knows better than the women of America." Reached for comment, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said: "Harris may be the first woman Vice President but she has implemented dangerously liberal policies that have left women worse off financially and far less safe than we were four years ago under President Trump. Harris has centered much of her campaign on preserving and expanding reproductive rights after the end of Roe v. Wade.
Persons: Donald Trump, Harris, Trump, Kamala Harris, Sarafina Chitika, Karoline Leavitt, Leavitt, Roe, Wade, abortion’s Organizations: Republican, NBC, Trump Locations: Green Bay , Wisconsin, America
With Harris at the top of the ticket, Democrats now see a chance to refocus voters on the issue and restore their margins among the abortion rights voters who had notably drifted away from Biden. In both the 2020 and 2022 campaigns, voters who backed legal abortion provided overwhelming support to Biden and other Democratic candidates. Across all of those battleground states, Biden this year was performing well below that level with voters who support legal abortion, polls have found. Those abortion rights voters also split about evenly on whether Biden or Trump was better for the economy. “Many of them aren’t single issue abortion voters; they are worried about the economy and inflation, they are worried about immigration,” McLaughlin said.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, wasn’t, Donald Trump’s, Harris, Biden, , Democratic pollster Anna Greenberg, “ It’s, Dobbs, Charles Franklin, Tony Evers, Katie Hobbs, Josh Shapiro, Gretchen Whitmer, Whitmer, Shapiro, Franklin, Trump, Roe, Wade, , Lake, Melissa Williams, ” Harris, Tresa Undem, ‘ what’s, , Greenberg, ” Greenberg, , John Della Volpe, Della Volpe, energize, Jason Cabel Roe, ” Trump, He’s, “ Donald Trump, Jim McLaughlin, McLaughlin, ” McLaughlin, Williams, JD Vance, ” Williams Organizations: CNN, Democratic, Edison Research, Democratic House, Democrats, Marquette Law School, SSRS, Quinnipiac University, Yahoo, Quinnipiac, Trump, Times, YouGov, Biden, Catholic, ” Voters, GOP, Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics, Republican Party, , Republicans, White House Locations: The Marquette, Pennsylvania , Wisconsin, Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Michigan, London, Harris, Iowa, America, Trump
Democrats argued that the results on Tuesday night showed abortion’s resonance even in some of the country’s most conservative areas. Support for the measure enshrining abortion rights was notably higher than the backing for the Democratic candidate for Senate last year, particularly in the suburban swing counties surrounding Columbus and Cleveland. The results will almost certainly require the State Supreme Court to invalidate a six-week ban with limited exceptions that passed in 2019. Republicans have been searching in vain for a successful message on abortion ever since the Supreme Court’s decision. For nearly a half-century, Republican candidates had simply proclaimed themselves “pro-life,” without delving into the details of what that meant.
Persons: Beshear, Hadley Duvall, Duvall, Trump, Roe, Glenn Youngkin, Organizations: Republican Party, Democratic, Court, Republicans, Republican, State Senate Locations: Kentucky, Ohio, Columbus, Cleveland, Virginia
Here is what to watch:Abortion access vs. Biden’s unpopularity in Virginia and Kentucky. All 140 seats in Virginia’s General Assembly are on the ballot Tuesday, with the Democratic-leaning state’s relatively popular Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, hoping to capture the State Senate and secure total Republican control of Richmond. That feat would propel Mr. Youngkin’s national ambitions. But Democrats are running on abortion rights, warning that G.O.P. control would end abortion access in the last state in the Southeast.
Persons: Biden’s, Donald J, Trump, Biden, Glenn Youngkin Organizations: New York Times, Democratic, Republican, State Senate Locations: Ohio , Kentucky, Virginia , Mississippi, Siena, Virginia, Kentucky, Richmond
The GOP divide was laid bare on the debate stage this week, as candidates backed a 15-week abortion ban, deferred to the states or tried to split the difference. “There’s no real consensus at this point.”Biden’s reelection campaign has also homed in on remarks GOP candidates made on abortion during the debate. The ad, aimed at women in seven battleground states, is part of a $25 million ad campaign CNN first reported earlier this week. Republicans have begun to coalesce around the idea of a federal abortion ban after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Pence used his remarks at the same conference to call on every GOP candidate to back a 15-week ban as a national standard.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Joe Biden’s, , Whit Ayres, , ” Biden’s, Republicans “, Biden’s, Donald Trump, Donald Trump , South Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, Ron DeSantis, ” Biden, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Dobbs, Jackson, Trump –, Georgia –, Tom Bonier, Bonier, they’ve, DeSantis, Susan B, Anthony Pro, ” Marjorie Dannenfelser, Kellyanne Conway, Nikki Haley, Asa Hutchinson, Doug Burgum, Mike Pence, Scott, Pence, CNN’s Dana Bash, Trump, ” Trump, Ayres, they’ll Organizations: CNN, Republican, GOP, Democratic, Republicans, ” CNN, Florida Gov, MAGA Republicans, Associated Press, NORC, for Public Affairs Research, Voters, Biden, America, Washington, Trump White House, UN Ambassador, South Carolina Gov, Arkansas Gov, Asa Hutchinson , North Dakota Gov, Thursday Fox, Trump, Freedom Coalition Locations: Donald Trump , South Carolina, Florida, U.S, Nevada , Arizona , Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arkansas, Asa Hutchinson , North
Mike DeWine of Ohio, a Republican, argued that Tuesday’s vote over how to amend the State Constitution was about protecting the state from a flood of special interest money. Secretary of State Frank LaRose, another Republican, urged voters to protect the “very foundational rules” of their constitution. But Ohio voters clearly didn’t buy it. But the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade has shifted the political intensity on the issue, reshaping a once mostly-silent coalition of liberal, swing and moderate Republican voters into a political force. “We’ve taken it on the chin since Dobbs,” said Michael Gonidakis, president of Ohio Right to Life in Columbus, Ohio, who helped organize efforts supporting the proposal on Tuesday.
Persons: Mike DeWine of, Frank LaRose, Court’s Dobbs, Roe, Wade, , Dobbs, , Michael Gonidakis, you’ll Organizations: Republican, Republicans Locations: Mike DeWine of Ohio, Ohio, Columbus , Ohio,
Erica’s pilots that day were volunteers with Elevated Access, a nonprofit set up last year to help people obtain abortions, often across state lines. In North Carolina, an anti-abortion, church-backed pregnancy center called Mountain Area Pregnancy Services confronted a harassment incident. Before Dobbs, the group’s abortion services operated on a budget of $20,000 per month. But the dearth of pharmacies willing to offer abortion medication meant that Honeybee soon became the main provider of the online-ordered, home-delivered pills. Abortion medication — which now accounts for more than half of abortions in the United States — produces roughly 40 percent of Honeybee’s revenue.
Persons: Wade, Health “, , Maren Hurley, Hey Jane, Jenice Fountain, Julia Rendleman, The New York Times Erica, ” Erica, Erica, Andy, , Gabriela Bhaskar, Dobbs, Kelsea McLain, Roe, , McLain, Yellowhammer, Fountain, Mike Belleme, Court’s Dobbs, Jeff Porter, Porter, ” Michelle Fenton, Ms, Fenton, Sharon Chischilly, Paddy, Rachael Lorenzo, Tracy Nguyen, Honeybee, Jessica Nouhavandi, Nouhavandi Organizations: Jackson, Health, Private, Yellowhammer Fund, The New York Times, Maryland —, D.C, Cessna, Fund, Birmingham, Pregnancy Services, The New York, Services, The New York Times Indigenous, Roe, Los Angeles Locations: Dobbs v, North Carolina, Hurley’s, Alabama, Louisiana, America, Minnesota, Twin Cities, Illinois, Maryland, Washington, Wisconsin, Birmingham, Ala, Asheville, N.C, Waynesville, New Mexico, Oklahoma , Texas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Culver City, Calif, Roe United States, United States
Abortion’s Impact on the 2022 Midterm Elections
  + stars: | 2022-10-23 | by ( Miguel Gonzalez | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Gretchen Whitmer, center, has fought to preserve access to abortion. Polls have shown Ms. Whitmer is leading her opponent in the final stretch of the campaign. Welcome to a special edition of WSJ’s politics newsletter looking at how abortion is a factor in the midterm elections. To receive our weekday edition and future special editions, sign up here. Three Questions for WSJ’s Julie BykowiczWSJ: How are voters reacting to the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in June, which ended the constitutional right to abortion and returned the issue to the states?
In cursive script, another vowed: “This is not the end.”Wednesday was the last day the Jackson Women’s Health Organization was legally allowed to perform abortions in Mississippi. Mississippi’s trigger law gave the Jackson Women’s Health Organization a 10-day window to continue operations after state Attorney General Lynn Fitch certified the Supreme Court’s ruling. Diane Derzis, owner of the Jackson Women's Health Organization, at a news conference on June 24. She fears that the fall of abortion rights, coupled with health care shortages in Mississippi’s poorest rural communities, will cost lives. “What we are is very grateful.”But he expressed doubt that Wednesday would be the final chapter in the fight over abortion rights in Mississippi — and the nation.
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