Genital Regulators Lose in Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia

  • https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/11/07/abortion-ohio-kentucky-virginia-elecitons/



    Abortion rights advocates win major victories in Ohio, Kentucky, Virginia

    The results sent a stark signal for 2024 about enduring demands across the political spectrum to protect access to abortion, even in conservative states

    By Hannah Knowles
    and
    Caroline Kitchener

    Updated November 8, 2023 at 12:29 a.m. EST|Published November 7, 2023 at 11:26 p.m. EST





    Abortion rights advocates won major victories Tuesday as voters in conservative-leaning Ohio decisively passed a constitutional amendment guaranteeing access to abortion, while those in ruby-red Kentucky reelected a Democratic governor who aggressively attacked his opponent for supporting the state’s near-total ban on the procedure.

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    In Virginia, a battleground state where Republicans pushed a proposal to outlaw most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, Democrats were projected to take control of the state legislature after campaigning heavily on preserving access.

    The results sent a stark signal about enduring demands across the political spectrum to protect access to abortion more than a year after Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court, heralding potentially far-reaching implications for the 2024 election. They offered more evidence that the end of Roe and the patchwork of abortion bans that followed have given Democrats a powerful argument to turn out their base and sway moderates and some Republicans. And they reaffirmed that GOP candidates who support restrictions are still struggling to find an effective message, even as some have tried to soften their pitch.

    “If I were an antiabortion politician, I’d be scared,” said Tresa Undem, a public opinion researcher who studies abortion and supports abortion rights.

    The most direct test of abortion politics came in Ohio, where abortion rights supporters entered Tuesday optimistic that a ballot measure called Issue 1 would pass. Ohioans had already weighed in on a referendum viewed a proxy for the abortion fight, voting in August against a proposal that would have boosted abortion opponents’ chances on Issue 1 by making it harder to amend the state constitution.

    OHIO-RESULTS-medium.jpg?v=12

    OHIO

    Nov. 7, 2023

    Voters supported an amendment that enshrined the right to abortion in the state constitution.


    56%

    In favor of abortion rights

    18 counties backed Trump in 2020 and

    voted in favor of abortion rights

    Against abortion rights


    Circles scaled according to vote margin

    Toledo

    Cleveland

    ­Youngstown

    Akron

    Canton

    Columbus

    Dayton

    Cincinnati

    100 MILES

    Data as of Nov. 7 at 11.30 p.m. An estimated 92 percent of votes have been counted.


    Kate Wagner, 51, a registered Republican who has drifted away from the party, said she discussed Issue 1 extensively with her sisters and was voting yes. She didn’t think she would get an abortion, but she also views the issue as deeply personal.

    “My whole thing is that I don’t like the idea of typically old White men telling me what I should be able to do,” said Wagner, who is from Springfield, Ohio. “They’ve never been in that position.”

    Preliminary exit polls had 1 in 5 Republicans and nearly two-thirds of independents backing the amendment, in a striking illustration of abortion rights’ popularity across party lines. With most of the vote counted late Tuesday, Issue 1 was projected to pass by a 10-point margin, while another ballot measure to legalize the recreational use of marijuana was projected to pass, 56 to 44 percent.

    Antiabortion advocates had tried to broaden their appeal by stressing that abortion is currently legal in Ohio until 22 weeks of pregnancy — not mentioning that, without further protections for abortion, the state’s Supreme Court could at any time reinstate a ban on the procedure after six weeks of pregnancy.

    A clear majority of Ohio voters said they felt “dissatisfied” or “angry” about the overturning of Roe, according to preliminary network exit polling. And while Donald Trump won Ohio by eight percentage points in 2020, the exit polls found a somewhat larger share of voters for President Biden in 2020 turning out for Issue 1 compared with Trump voters — suggesting that Democrats were particularly motivated.

    But antiabortion advocates were adamant that Ohio should not be seen as a test case for 2024.

    “I think people are overinterpreting what this means on a national level,” said Kristi Hamrick, vice president of media and policy for Students for Life of America, one of the largest national antiabortion groups. “Each fight is unique.”

    Abortion was just one factor of many in the complex races that played out Tuesday, testing voters’ mood and satisfaction with both parties. Democrats were working to outperform an unpopular president; Republicans were facing their own woes with chaos in Congress and continued fealty to former president Trump, a polarizing figure to many moderate voters who is well-positioned to become the party’s 2024 presidential nominee.

    Yet the issue was an important through line, and strategists from both parties were watching closely for clues to their best path in 2024. That was evident in Kentucky, where the campaign of Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear put millions behind ads attacking his Republican challenger, Daniel Cameron, on abortion — even though Republicans’ supermajority in the legislature means the gubernatorial race’s impact on abortion policy is highly limited.

    Democrat Andy Beshear wins second term as Kentucky governor 1:29 Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D) gave his victory speech Nov. 7 after he was elected to a second term, defeating his Republican opponent Daniel Cameron. (Video: AP)

    One of the first people Beshear thanked on Tuesday night was Hadley Duvall, a young woman who appeared in one of his campaign ads, which went viral. In the commercial, Duvall tells voters that she was sexually assaulted by her stepfather when she was 12 and blasts Cameron’s support for Kentucky’s abortion ban without exceptions for rape and incest.

    “Because of her courage, this commonwealth is going to be a better place and people are going to reach out for the help they need,” Beshear said.

    In interviews, it was clear the ad had made an impression with Democrats and Republicans alike — and abortion was often one of the first issues that Kentuckians, especially young voters, brought up while explaining their pick for governor. Cameron said this fall he would sign exceptions for abortions in cases of rape and incest if legislators passed them, but he has also defended the current law in court.

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    “People who aren’t ready to have kids, people who can’t raise children, need and deserve that option,” said Rebekah Flowers, a 20-year-old student at the University of Louisville, calling Cameron “extreme” on abortion. She was a bit disappointed that Beshear didn’t mention the issue in his brief remarks at a rally on her campus last week.

    Just a few years ago, Republicans in Kentucky were the ones leaning into abortion as a line of attack. But after the end of Roe, which established a constitutional right to abortion, it has become a potent issue for Democrats. Voters there last year declined to amend their state constitution to say it does not guarantee a right to abortion access — underscoring a deep disconnect between public opinion and the near-total abortion ban that took effect in Kentucky after Roe fell.

    Some Republicans have tried to soften their pitch on abortion and appeal to moderates after strict bans helped sink many GOP candidates in last year’s midterms. But Tuesday’s elections underscored the party’s continued vulnerability on the issue.

    “I believe that voters — Democrats, independents and a growing number of Republicans — are going to support those candidates, [irrespective] of their party affiliation, who are going to protect and strengthen our democracy and who are going to restore those freedoms that politicians have taken away from us,” said Rep. Greg Landsman (D), who represents a purple district in Ohio.

    Democrats have already signaled they will make abortion a key issue in the presidential race, no matter who is the GOP nominee. Republican candidates are divided on the issue, with Trump backing away from the strict bans he paved the way for by appointing antiabortion justices to the Supreme Court.

    Despite that retreat, “there is nothing that will be complicated about attacking [Trump] on this issue,” said Pat Dennis, the president of American Bridge, a Democratic group that has focused much of its opposition research on Republican candidates on their abortion stances.

    There are also efforts underway to put abortion directly on the 2024 ballot in many other states, including the crucial battlegrounds of Arizona, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

    Democrats had been optimistic heading into Tuesday’s votes, buoyed by the fact that, since Roe was overturned, voters had backed abortion rights in ballot measure fights in six states across the political spectrum: California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont.

    FOURSTATES-medium.jpg?v=17

    KANSAS



    MICHIGAN

    Aug. 2, 2022

    Nov. 8, 2022

    Voters supported an amendment that enshrined the right to reproductive freedom in the state constitution

    Voters rejected an amendment that would have removed the right to abortion from the state constitution


    59%



    57%

    In favor of abortion rights

    Against abortion rights


    Circles scaled according to vote margin

    Counties that backed Trump in 2020

    and voted in favor of abortion rights

    Kansas

    City

    Topeka

    Flint

    Grand Rapids

    Lansing

    Wichita

    Kalamazoo

    Detroit

    Ann Arbor

    100 MILES

    100 MILES


    MONTANA



    KENTUCKY

    Nov. 8, 2022

    Nov. 8, 2022

    Voters rejected a state law that would have levied criminal charges on medical workers who didn’t take extraordinary efforts to save infants born under extreme conditions

    Voters rejected an amendment that would have said there was no right to abortion, or any requirement to fund abortion, in the state constitution


    53%



    52%

    Frankfort

    Louisville

    Lexington

    Henderson

    Helena

    Missoula

    Bozeman

    Billings

    Bowling Green

    100 MILES

    100 MILES


    Abortion was also front and center in many down-ballot races. In Pennsylvania, a key swing state, a state Supreme Court race drew more than $17 million in TV ad spending, with many of the ads touching on abortion rights. Democrat Daniel McCaffery, who was projected to win, began one of his ads by saying that “our freedoms are under attack — workers’ rights, women’s reproductive rights, the right to vote.”

    After a series of defeats since the Supreme Court overturned Roe, many antiabortion advocates saw Tuesday’s contests as their last opportunity to find a winning message on abortion ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

    Across Virginia, Republicans tried to win over moderates with a 15-week abortion ban, emphasizing that such a measure would allow the vast majority of abortions to continue. On the campaign trail, Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin was careful to refer to the proposed restriction as a “limit” on abortion, avoiding the word “ban.”

    “I think this is a choice between no limits and reasonable limits, and I think this is one where Virginians come together around reasonableness,” Youngkin said in a television interview Sunday. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, who has supported a ban on most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, visits a polling location Tuesday. (Julia Nikhinson for The Washington Post)

    But Democrats were projected to not only maintain a narrow majority in the state Senate but also flip the House of Delegates, delivering a major blow to Youngkin’s agenda.

    In one of the state’s most closely watched contests, Democrat Schuyler VanValkenburg flipped a Republican-held seat in the suburbs of Richmond after emphasizing his commitment to protect abortion rights in the state.

    His opponent, Republican Siobhan Dunnavant, made a 15-week abortion ban a cornerstone of her campaign. An OB/GYN, Dunnavant aired a television ad in which she spoke to voters about her position on abortion, arguing that the current Virginia law, which allows abortions until 27 weeks of pregnancy, is “not reasonable.”

    “It is unnecessary, extreme and heartbreaking,” she said in the ad.

    Republicans who have successfully passed antiabortion laws in other states expressed frustration with the results Tuesday night.

    “I think the pro-life movement has got to get off its butt and start articulating to the American people why a baby should not be aborted after, say, the 13th week of pregnancy,” North Carolina state Sen. Amy Galey (R) said, even as she also criticized Democratic attacks as misleading. Galey helped write a 12-week abortion law that passed in her state last spring.

    But opponents of abortion had mixed ideas Tuesday on the best path forward.

    Kristan Hawkins, the president of Students for Life of America, said Republicans need to fully embrace that this fight is about abortion, instead of burying the issue in messaging about parents’ rights or the well-being of the mother.

    Patrick Brown, a fellow at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, said that abortion supporters need to regroup and prioritize legislation aimed at supporting mothers and babies — paid leave, child tax credits, Medicaid expansion for pregnant women — “coupled with crystal-clear exemptions in the case of rape, incest and the life of the mother,” Brown said.

  • Cuntservatives are the dog who caught the car. For decades you cunts used abortion to motivate the mouth-breathers. For decades you had competent leadership who understood that overturning R v W would be a huge mistake. Then you all went full retard and elected a bunch of mouth-breathers who actually believed the hype. They actually thought that regulating other peoples' genitals was a good idea, so they did it.


    You cunts sowed the wind, now you reap the whirlwind.

  • How the fuck did you inbreds manage to lose in KY of all places?


    So many boomers have died from old age and from offing themsves during the pandemic. Millennials have not made the switch to cuntservative in middle-age because our rigged system has screwed them over so badly. Gen Z is mostly not-white and they hate everything about the shitheads who call themselves conservative. Women are pissed that cuntservative freaks can't stop imposing new genital regulations on them...


    The great majority is against you, and rightly so. You inbred geriatric shitheads pushed it too far. We're gonna lock up your Orange Retard. I'm glad that many of you will live long enough to see all of your billionaire-worshiping, bible-thumping, genital-regulating bullshit overturned. We'll wait a while to fix the abortion thing though. That was the best gift you dipshits could have given to normal people.

  • IF YOU DON'T VOTE FOR DEMS YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO MURDER YOUR UNBORN CHILDREN!!1!!!


    I agree with scroat here. The correct course of action is to go the other way... Allow the dems to FULLY legalize offspring murder up to and including the eighteenth year... People make mistakes; they shouldn't be held to them for the rest of their lives.

  • Abortion was never a Constitutionally guaranteed "right" and the SCOTUS rightfully reversed Roe vs Wade and in doing so they sent it back to the States to regulate where it should have been from the start.

  • https://www.yahoo.com/news/far-hosts-blaming-gops-big-192544213.html






    Far-right hosts are blaming the GOP's big election losses on Taylor Swift


    Natalie Musumeci
    Thu, November 9, 2023 at 11:25 AM PST·3 min read


    Jack Posobiec; Taylor Swift; Charlie Kirk


    Jack Posobiec; Taylor Swift; Charlie KirkJason Davis/Getty Images;Mike Coppola/Getty Images for MTV;Joe Raedle/Getty Images


    Some far-right commentators are blaming Taylor Swift for the GOP's Tuesday election losses.Both Charlie Kirk and Jack Posobiec vented about Swift's political sway.The pop star encouraged her fans to vote, but a GOP strategist warned election losses weren't her fault.

    Far-right commentators are putting the blame for the GOP's major election losses during Tuesday's races on one celeb: Taylor Swift.

    On Tuesday, the pop superstar encouraged her fans to vote in their local elections, writing on Instagram: "Voters gonna vote!"

    "It's Election Day! If you are registered to vote in Colorado, Kentucky, Maine, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas or Virginia, it's time to use your voice," Swift wrote, sharing a link to Vote.org.

    Though Swift didn't explicitly endorse anyone in this election, right-wing hosts bemoaned the power of the Swifties.

    Activist Jack Posobiec said in a Wednesday post to his more than 2.3 million followers on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, that the billionaire global pop sensation was "influencing an army of voters."

    "Republicans still haven't internalized that the Left promotes abortion as a pro-feminism issue. They aren't voting to kill babies, they're voting bc of feminist movies like Barbie and pop stars like Taylor Swift influencing an army of voters," Posobiec wrote.

    He fumed in another all-caps post that "THE CHILDLESS, UNMARRIED ABORTION ARMY MOBILIZED BY BARBIE, TAYLOR SWIFT, AND TIKTOK" was "CRUSHING REPUBLICANS AT THE BALLOT BOX."

    Far-right firebrand media personality Charlie Kirk also went after Swift on his talk radio show on Wednesday, saying that the Republican Party "better have a plan" for the "Anti-Hero" singer's influence over young voters.

    "Taylor Swift is going to come out in the presidential election and she is going to mobilize her fans," Kirk warned his viewers on Wednesday, adding, "And we're going to be like, 'Oh wow, where did all these young, female voters come from?' We better have a plan for that."

    Kirk continued: "All the Swifties want is swift abortion. That's what they want. It's 100%."

    The right-wing host then took a shot at Swift, saying, "We act as if she is like Mother Mary or something. Newsflash, she ain't Mother Mary."

    Swift broke her long political silence in 2018 to endorse two Democratic candidates from Tennessee. She also expressed her support for LGBTQ rights and condemned systemic racism.

    The music superstar announced ahead of the 2020 election that her White House pick was President Joe Biden and this year has urged her more than 270 million Instagram followers to register to vote, leading to "record-breaking" registrations.

    Reps for Swift did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Insider on Thursday.

    Posobiec and Kirk's commentary comes after Democrats saw a wave of major victories in Tuesday's elections. Among them included Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear's re-election win in Kentucky, Democrats winning majorities in Virginia's state House of Delegates and state Senate, and Ohio voters approving a measure to codify the right to an abortion in the state's constitution.

    Some Republican White House hopefuls blamed former President Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, for the GOP's Tuesday election losses.

    But Republican strategist Doug Heye suggested to the Washington Examiner that that's a stretch.

    "We've set up a construct in America where everything has to be viewed through the prism of either Donald Trump or Taylor Swift, and that's not reality," Heye told the news outlet.

    Meanwhile, Swifties on TikTok seemed to be relishing the attention.

    Political activist Olivia Julianna shared a clip of Kirk's comments with the text "Swifties… you know what to do," along with a link to Vote.org.

    "Ooohh, look what you made us do," one user replied.

    "Should we make friendship bracelets for voting day??" another asked.