Friday, May 3, 2024

Abortion-rights victories cement 2024 playbook while opponents scramble for new strategy


Anti-abortion leaders woke up Wednesday to the sobering reality that abortion rights remain the nationā€™s predominant political issue. Decisive wins in swing and red states in two national election cycles since Roe v. Wade was overturned last year have given momentum to reproductive rights groups, who aggressively campaigned and fundraised in key states across the country, and intend to triple down for 2024.

Meanwhile, the anti-abortion movement is scrambling for an effective 2024 strategy after crushing losses. Longtime anti-abortion activist the Rev. Pat Mahoney said in large part Republicans have been ineffective communicators on the issue and were wildly outspent.

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ā€œI think for the pro-life movement, we have to now truly recognize, when it comes to abortion bans, this is something that Americans do not want right now,ā€ Mahoney told States Newsroom as he hustled to catch a connecting flight from Ohio ā€“ whoseĀ voters enshrined the right to abortionĀ ā€“ home to Virginia, where Democratic candidatesĀ overtook the legislatureĀ after campaigns focused on abortion rights.

Mahoney is currently chief strategy officer for Stanton Public Policy Center, the political arm of Stanton Healthcare, a network of anti-abortion clinics headquartered in Idaho that offer limited reproductive health services. He said the anti-abortion movement needs to better coordinate a national messaging and fundraising strategy to be able to compete with the reproductive rights movement.

Protesters gather at the Historic Florida Capitol building following the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned abortion protections under Roe v. Wade June 24, 2022. Credit: Danielle J. Brown

ā€œRight now the pro-choice movement is more committed to funding in elections the protection and promotion of abortion than the pro-life movement is committed to ending abortion violence and making abortion unthinkable,ā€ Mahoney said. ā€œI live in Virginia. The state is doing well, the economyā€™s doing well, by all accounts. [Glenn] Youngkin is a relatively popular governor. Every ad I saw on television for every Democrat ā€“ I mean, a barrage of them ā€“ was how MAGA Republicans or pro-life anti-choice activists want to take womenā€™s rights away. They were all about abortion.ā€

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He said heā€™s expecting Republican candidates to continue ā€œfumblingā€ the issue on the presidential debate stage in Miami tonight.

ā€œHardly any Republican has handled this well,ā€ he said. ā€œTheyā€™ve been all over the map.

Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, also urged the GOP ā€“ many of whose candidates tried to ignore the abortion issue or soften their stances ā€“ to ā€œwake up.ā€

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ā€œThe true lesson from last nightā€™s loss is that Democrats are going to make abortion front and center throughout 2024 campaigns,ā€ Dannenfelser said in aĀ statement. ā€œThe GOP consultant class needs to wake up. Candidates must put money and messaging toward countering the Democratsā€™ attacks or they will lose every time.ā€

But anti-abortion leaders say they will not give up their mission and will continue pushing controversial policies like granting ā€œpersonhoodā€ to embryos.

ā€œVoters overwhelmingly cast their ballot to enshrine abortion into the state constitution. This is a bitter pill, and thereā€™s no sugarcoating it,ā€ Americans United for Life interim president Kevin Tordoff said in an email to supporters. ā€œYou and I know that constitutional justice, always and everywhere, means equal protection for all. We will continue, as we have since our founding in 1971, to strive for the day when all are welcomed throughout life and protected in law. Let us continue to stand together in this mission.ā€

Anti-abortion movement leader Terrisa Bukovinac, meanwhile, is calling for the anti-abortion movement to get more radical. She comes from the direct-action wing of the movement that believes voters need to see graphic images of aborted fetuses in order to be moved on the issue. The self-described atheist and leftist used to work in animal rights activism in San Francisco before moving to Washington, D.C., to found Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising, one of the few anti-abortion groups that supports LGBTQ rights. Bukovinac isĀ running for presidentĀ as a Democrat with a targeted goal of airing campaign ads in key markets that show graphic images of fetuses she and another activist obtained outside of an abortion clinic in 2022.

ā€œThe reason that we oppose [abortion-rights amendments] is because they are widening the scope of abortion into the third trimester for elective reasons,ā€ Bukovinac told States Newsroom. ā€œAnd if weā€™re not showing the victims, like non stop, of abortion in these later trimesters, then weā€™re not really communicating with people why we oppose these measures and why they should also.ā€

Bukovinac told States Newsroom she is working to air her first ad in New Hampshire by the beginning of next year, but fundraising for her tiny campaign has been slow-going. She said stations typically charge more for campaign ads that feature controversial content.

Following Tuesdayā€™s losses, Bukovinac said Maryland Right to Life reached out to her to conference on strategies ahead of the stateā€™sĀ upcoming abortion referendum.

ā€œI think that they have to show the victims of abortion in an aggressive way,ā€ Bukovinac said, of anti-abortion groups. ā€œThey need to say that abortion is murder. They need to be doing direct actions. I think those are the three most important things that weā€™re going to be doing in the next however many years it takes to reach left on this issue.ā€

Tuesdayā€™s results were equally instructive for abortion-rights organizers in showing how effective abortion rights is as a voting issue. Ohio organizers in particularĀ faced many obstacles, led by state Republican leaders, in trying to even get their initiative on the ballot. Despite what activists said was misleading text on the ballot, the measure carried 57%, includingĀ 18% of Republican voters.

ā€œLooking at the results in Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky and Pennsylvania, it is pretty clear that abortion matters to voters because it matters to people in their everyday lives,ā€ said Angela Vasquez-Giroux, vice president of communications and research of Reproductive Freedom for All, an abortion rights lobbying group formerly called NARAL Pro-Choice America. ā€œAnd I think when you look down the road to 2024, and you see places like Florida, that gives you a sense of whatā€™s possible. Even where you have hostile legislatures and gerrymandering and all of the structural inequalities stacked against you, you can still make big change when you get the power back to voters.ā€

People protest in response to the Dobbs v. Jackson Womenā€™s Health Organization ruling in front of the U.S. Supreme Court on June 24, 2022. The Courtā€™s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Womenā€™s Health overturned the landmark 50-year-old Roe v. Wade case and erased a federal right to an abortion. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, 21 states have eliminated or restricted access because of abortion bans. And as States Newsroom has reported, even with health exceptions andĀ especially without them, women have been denied medical care during pregnancy-related emergencies.

ā€œ[Voters] understand that life is not these one-size-fits all bans,ā€ Vasquez-Giroux said. ā€œThey donā€™t account for how complex pregnancy and life are. People understand that you canā€™t legislate a belief system onto a medical procedure and expect that nothing bad is going to happen.ā€

A sample of reproductive rights wins from Tuesday night:

Kentucky: Democratic Gov. Andy BeshearĀ won re-election; challenger Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron had also made abortion a huge focus of his campaign and gave votersĀ varying answersĀ on whether he would support exceptions to Kentuckyā€™s near-total abortion ban in cases of incest and rape.

New Jersey: With every legislative seat up for grabs Tuesday, DemocratsĀ retained controlĀ of both houses, after Republicans had dismissed their strategy to focus on reproductive rights over issues like state spending and crime rates.

Ohio: AĀ win for Issue 1 means the stateā€™s constitution will now guarantee the right to abortion through viability (and beyond for medical emergencies), as well as the right to birth control, childbirth, fertility treatment and miscarriage management.

The win means a blocked six-week abortion ban currently under review by the courts will likely be struck down. And it marks the seventh state to affirm reproductive rights on the ballot since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

Pennsylvania: Democrat Daniel McCafferyĀ won his seatĀ on the liberal-leaning Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and marked the second time that Reproductive Freedom for All endorsed in a judicial race.

Virginia: DemocratsĀ winning both state housesĀ means Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin is unlikely to push through the abortion ban he championed this election cycle. For now the state remains one of the few abortion access points in the South.

Vasquez-Giroux said Reproductive Freedom for All will continue to support local reproductive-rights groups with their ballot measures and state and local elections, and will help to coordinate strategy at the national level.

ā€œNo matter how you apply abortion as an issue, in elections, itā€™s successful because people understand exactly whatā€™s at stake ā€“ your ability to live in a place where itā€™s safe to become pregnant. Itā€™s a pretty big deal,ā€ Vasquez-Giroux said. ā€œFolks understand that it means that you have to protect it at every opportunity. ā€¦ I think we can expect to see repeats of last night and 2022 in 2024.ā€

This article originally appeared in florida phoenix

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