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  • snitzoid

No Karl, I do believe the hype about abortion.

I don't believe the abortion issue will frame the presidential election (although the problem properly lies squarely at Trump's feet for his Supreme choices). That's not to say it won't influence heavily State Gov and Congressional elections as the highest court has turned this into a state issue.


The conservatives throughout Europe universally figured out that their ability to compete effectively rested on negotiating some middle ground on this issue. Almost every EU member has a legal abortion, typically limited to 12-16 weeks.


If the GOP wishes to gain control of both houses, it might want to open its eyes.


Don’t Believe the Hype About Abortion

Its importance in last week’s elections for state office has been vastly overstated.

By Karl Rove, WSJ

Nov. 15, 2023


There’s a tendency in politics to ascribe success and failure to one thing when it’s really more complicated. That has been the case with most coverage of last week’s elections. “Abortion issues burn GOP” screamed ABC News. “Democrats see big wins” shouted Roll Call, which said “access to abortion” was “front and center.”


The key example offered for this line of reasoning was Virginia’s state legislative elections, in which Democrats held the Senate, losing only one seat, and flipped the House by picking up three. Vox’s Rachel Cohen described the results in Virginia and elsewhere as “a resounding victory for Democrats and abortion rights supporters.” But is holding a 21-19 majority in the Senate and a 51-49 majority in the House really a resounding victory?

I think not. Virginia is a blue state that Mr. Biden carried 54% to 44% in 2020. Last week Republicans won in seven House districts Mr. Biden carried in 2020 by up to 10 points and four Senate districts he won by up to 9 points. Democrats didn’t flip a single district Donald Trump took. These margins don’t fit with the notion that abortion draws large numbers of independents and Republicans to vote for Democratic candidates.


Two factors probably had a bigger effect than abortion. The commonwealth was redistricted before the election. That benefited Democrats last week, according to Sean Trende, a senior election analyst at RealClearPolitics. Since Virginia is blue, the redistricting resulted in more solidly Democratic districts than solidly Republican ones. Mr. Trende was one of the special masters appointed by the Virginia Supreme Court to draw the lines.


Offsetting the Democratic redistricting advantage was the popularity of Virginia’s Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin. An Oct. 16 Washington Post/Schar School poll found that 54% of Virginians approved of the governor’s job performance and 39% disapproved. Only 43% of the same respondents thought Mr. Biden was doing a good job, while 55% didn’t. This favorability advantage for Republicans helped GOP candidates grab districts that normally would have gone Democratic.


Given that their state has trended Democratic for years, Virginia Republicans held up admirably against a challenging map. The GOP would cheer if it pulled off similar margin changes in 2024. If Republicans flipped every U.S. House seat Democrats won by 10 points or less in 2022, the GOP would rack up 50 seats—a 271-seat majority, the biggest GOP seat haul since 1928.


GOP Senate candidates would also be sitting pretty if they do as well in 2024 as Virginia Republican Senate hopefuls did last week. If GOP candidates won every state Mr. Biden carried by 9 points or less in 2020 and all the Trump states, there would be new Republican senators from Arizona, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Wisconsin—giving the GOP a 58-seat majority.


Abortion-rights advocates also point to Kentucky, where incumbent Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear defeated Trump-backed Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, 52.5% to 47.5%. Ms. Cohen wrote that Mr. Beshear’s re-election provides “the clearest evidence” that abortion drew “voters of all persuasions” to support Democrats.


Democrats did run a powerful ad featuring a young woman raped by her stepfather when she was 12. But if abortion alone decided the governor’s race, why is it that the rest of the statewide Republican ticket won with 57% to 61% of the vote and an average margin of 18 points? All those Republicans are strongly pro-life. Maybe they won because the governor’s race was more about the incumbent’s record and each candidate’s messages on a range of issues, not only abortion.


On the flip side, Ohio approved a ballot measure enshrining a right to abortion in the state constitution by 56.6% to 43.4%. But Republicans royally screwed up that situation. First, they tried to game the system with an August referendum raising the threshold for amending the state constitution, which voters soundly rejected. Then they didn’t offer an alternative to the unlimited-abortion proposal and were massively outspent.


Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, pro-abortion groups have gone seven for seven on state ballot measures. To describe last week’s results as “a huge sign of Democrats’ continued momentum”—in the words of a Democratic Party tweet—and principally credit abortion is to oversimplify. Abortion might have helped Democrats sometimes, but the issue is hardly a silver bullet. As Virginia showed, as long as Mr. Biden is the face of the party, pro-life candidates can make gains on Democratic turf if they frame the abortion issue with care.


Mr. Rove helped organize the political-action committee American Crossroads and is author of “The Triumph of William McKinley” (Simon & Schuster, 2015).

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