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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsGutting of Roe depressed rural voter turnout, hurting Republicans in special elections
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/10/3/2126676/-Gutting-of-Roe-depressed-rural-voter-turnout-hurting-Republicans-in-special-electionsGutting of Roe depressed rural voter turnout, hurting Republicans in special elections
Kerry Eleveld
Daily Kos Staff
Monday October 03, 2022 · 11:31 AM EDT
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A new analysis by Politico of voting patterns in special elections since the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade shows that rural voters have been less likely to turn out than their urban and suburban counterparts.
While high turnout among Democratic voters has been hailed as key to Democrats' better-than-expected showings in a handful of special elections since the Dobbs ruling, the rural nonvote has proven to be another factor working to Democrats advantage.
Politico looked at four special elections since the June ruling held in Nebraska, New York, and Minnesota and found that the portion of urban/suburban voters who cast ballots in those races outpaced the portion of rural voters who did by 5 points, 27%-22%. Prior to the Dobbs decision, those three groups were turning out at comparable rates.
In every one of those races, Democrats also outperformed Joe Biden's showing in the 2020 election.
The notion that the high courts gutting of Roe is actually depressing the rural vote actually aligns with recent polling released by the progressive group Rural Organizing and YouGov Blue.
The survey found that a candidate's pro-choice position was the most important issue tested among rural voters polled in 10 battleground states, even outpacing party ID (i.e., being a Republican), which came in second. The polling also found that a hypothetical Democratic candidate got a far bigger boost in support among rural voters after an endorsement from an abortion rights group such as Planned Parenthood than it did from an endorsement by a labor group (e.g., AFL-CIO) or even the Farm Bureau.
As I wrote last week, while a Farm Bureau endorsement resulted in a 5-point bump (28% to 33%) for a Democratic candidate, a Planned Parenthood endorsement yielded an 18-point boost (24% to 42%). The impact was biggest among voters under 45, where a Planned Parenthood endorsement increased support for a Democratic candidate by 17 points, from 36% to 53%.
The campaign manager for one of the special elections analyzed by Politico said Dobbs has proven to be a double whammy for Republicans, hurting them with their own base while helping to more firmly solidify suburban voters in Democrats' camp.
Republicans are not as energized as they want or expected, and Democrats are very energized right now, said Chris Walsh, who managed Democrat Pat Ryan's successful campaign to win New York's 19th Congressional District in an August special election.
The suburban voters who Republicans thought were just anti-Trump are now kind of coming to realize theyre anti-Republican, Walsh added. With the Dobbs decision, it really fired them up that this is still an existential fight for their lives.
The suburban voters who Republicans thought were just anti-Trump are now kind of coming to realize theyre anti-Republican, Walsh added. With the Dobbs decision, it really fired them up that this is still an existential fight for their lives.
Walsh's GOP counterpart was eager to reframe the upcoming midterms as a referendum on President Joe Biden's leadership rather than the high court's enormously unpopular ruling overturning Americans constitutional right to an abortion.
Democrats played politics, they knew having competitive primaries in [Ryans district] would boost turnout for the special election, and it would create this false narrative that the election was a referendum on Dobbs, said Will Dawson, campaign manager for Marc Molinaro, Ryans Republican rival in August. The midterm elections are and always have been a referendum on the White House.
But the idea that Democrats pulled some crafty political jujitsu to reframe the narrative is laughable. In fact, the House Democratic campaign arm didn't even invest in the race. Republicans ultimately dropped $1.3 million on the NY-19 contest, outspending Democrats 3 to 1. Still, they not only lost, their candidate performed worse than Donald Trump's showing in the district in 2020.
Democrats aren't in total agreement about what accounts for the drop off in rural votinga sense of complacency because Republicans finally achieved their goal of overturning Roe or an actual rejection of that decision.
A lot of rural voters, theyre more conservative religiously and they were very mobilized by abortion and now they think theyve won, explained Democratic pollster Celinda Lake, who worked on Bidens 2020 campaign.
But former Democratic Montana Gov. Steve Bullock sees the effect of the Dobbs ruling on rural voters differently.
I think its suppressing some of the Republican interest in rural areas, Bullock said. "In rural areas where access to affordable and quality health care is already challenged, when you turn around and say that youll have no reproductive health care in many states, I think thats in part why were seeing what were seeing.
Either way, if it holds in November, depressed turnout among rural voters would hurt Republicans while boosting Democrats chances of either keeping the House or narrowing the governing margin that Republicans have to work with.
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Gutting of Roe depressed rural voter turnout, hurting Republicans in special elections (Original Post)
babylonsister
Oct 2022
OP
Oh I agree completely..they have been so wrong..KS, the house in '20, the run offs in GA
PortTack
Oct 2022
#5
We need to turn out to end the evil of the abortion restrictions since Roe!
Hermit-The-Prog
Oct 2022
#7
msongs
(67,430 posts)1. single issue voters got their wish, now content to stay home. good, stay home nt
Freddie
(9,272 posts)2. Exactly what I'm thinking
They won, why bother voting?
OAITW r.2.0
(24,530 posts)3. Unintended consequences.
Hahahahhahahahahah
On edit, I think polling has no clue what is happening in November.
PortTack
(32,785 posts)5. Oh I agree completely..they have been so wrong..KS, the house in '20, the run offs in GA
Lots and lots of missteps on their part
PortTack
(32,785 posts)4. Hope the trend continues!
Laura PourMeADrink
(42,770 posts)6. Why we need to keep this front and center, but crickets
Hermit-The-Prog
(33,388 posts)7. We need to turn out to end the evil of the abortion restrictions since Roe!
The radicalized Republican party is not done with draconian laws to control and torture women and girls. Their candidates have been scrubbing abortion from their web sites, but they can't scrub the blood from their hands or the evil from their intentions.
Roe, Roe, Roe your vote
against theocracy!
Republicans revoke your rights
and kill democracy!
THESE are the races that will determine control of the House of Representatives:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100217192221
Stick 'em up for a blue wave: https://www.democraticunderground.com/100217078977