Gwynn ap Nudd, on 04 May 2022 - 02:45 AM, said:
Cause, on 03 May 2022 - 04:10 PM, said:
Am I being Naive in thinking that if this happens, the political backlash would be huge. 70% of Americans support abortion. Seventy Percent!
If they undo Roe how does every republican politician not get abndoned by voters, female voters especially untill they promise to fix it. Im no expert but I always thought a lot of the anti-abortion rhetoric was used to anchor the evangelical vote while knowing that Roe Vs Wade existed so they didnt have to actually follow through. This will be hugely unpopular. They will anchor the evangelical vote but lose female voters everywhere else.
Also I see Roberts has slammed the leak. Does that confirm that the judgement is definitely real? I also cant help but wonder if the conservative side leaked it themselves. Test the waters to see if the public would really allow it.
The house seats are so gerrymandered and so few are competitive, that most Republican representatives will be safe. Few senate seats are competitive either. Lots of polling also says that abortion rights are lower priority than the economy, especially with current inflation rates, and for some reason people still think Republicans manage the economy better. Of course people`s opinion on how important abortion access is may change when access goes away, but that probably won`t effect elections before 2024.
I agree with Carlin`s bit about Republicans on abortion. Republicans have long been pro-birth, not pro-life. They say they will protect you until the day you are born then, fuck it, you`re on your own.
https://www.washingt...women-roe-leak/
``A further irony is that many of the states that have enacted the most restrictive bans on abortion also spend the least money to provide health and economic benefits for expecting mothers and children once they're born.
The numbers don't lie when you look at state rankings on maternal morbidity, infant mortality, premature birth, child poverty, birth weight, access to health care, day care, food stamps and housing. Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.'s draft opinion is about a case that comes from Mississippi — a state that ranks dead last in preterm births, neonatal mortality and overall child well-being.``
'Do Americans Support Abortion Rights? Depends on the State.
In the 13 states that have enacted so-called trigger laws[...] 43 percent of adults on average say abortion should be legal in most or all cases, while 52 percent say it should be illegal in most or all cases.
Voters are more divided in the dozen or so states that have pre-Roe bans on the books or that are expected to enact new abortion restrictions if Roe is overturned. In those states [...] 49 percent of adults say abortion should be legal in most or all cases, compared with 45 percent who say otherwise.
[...]
national outcry over a court decision to overturn Roe might not carry many political consequences in the states where abortions could be immediately restricted. [...]
But in some states, a fight over new abortion restrictions might pose serious political risks for conservatives, perhaps especially in the seven mostly Republican-controlled states that are seen as most likely to enact new restrictions even though a majority of voters tend to support legal abortion.
The public's views on abortion are notoriously hard to measure, with large segments of the public often seeming to offer muddled or inconsistent answers. Polls consistently show that around two-thirds of Americans support the court's decision in Roe v. Wade and oppose overturning it. Yet just as many Americans say they support banning abortion in the second trimester, a step barred by Roe. [...] people split almost evenly over whether they consider themselves "pro-choice" or "pro-life."
Texans roughly split on abortion [...] But abortion was almost a nonissue in the state's primary in March[...] Only 39 percent of Texans said the state's abortion laws should be "less strict" in a poll in February, several months after the passage of the law, which effectively bans abortion after around six weeks of pregnancy.
Abortion-rights advocates might be on more favorable political terrain in the more traditionally competitive Midwestern states. A modest majority of voters say abortion should be mostly legal [...]
It's unclear if the abortion issue will be enough to redraw the political map. [...] predominantly white working-class voters who swung [...] to [...] Trump in [...] 2016 [...] tended to back abortion rights.'
Do Americans Support Abortion Rights? Depends on the State. - The New York Times (nytimes.com)