Guest Editorials, Opinion

When will GOP get the message people want their abortion rights?

Here is the lesson from last Tuesday’s special election in Ohio, where voters resoundingly defeated a ballot measure that would have made it more difficult to pass state constitutional amendments — notably the one enshrining abortion rights in the Ohio Constitution on the November ballot:

People support abortion rights — and democracy.

Even people in a state that elected conservative leaders were highly motivated to participate in a hastily called special election in summer with just one item on the ballot that wasn’t about abortion but had everything to do with abortion.

The measure, Issue 1, which would have raised the threshold for passing a constitutional amendment ballot measure from a simple majority to a 60% supermajority, was placed on the ballot by the Republican-dominated legislature just a year after the same state legislature voted to eliminate most August special elections because of cost and low turnout. It would have also made it harder to collect the number of signatures needed to get a constitutional amendment on the ballot by requiring signatures from all of Ohio’s 88 counties. Currently, signatures need to come from 44 of the counties.

Legislators made no secret that Issue 1 was an unabashed attempt to make it more difficult to pass a citizen-initiated amendment to the state constitution enshrining the right to an abortion up to fetal viability (or beyond when needed to protect the health of the pregnant person). Abortion protection amendments in other states have passed with simple majorities but under 60%.

Why have Republican leaders failed to grasp that the majority of Americans support the protection of abortion rights, regardless of the political leanings of the state in which they live? Voters in Michigan, Kentucky, California and Vermont passed constitutional amendments in 2022 either making it clear they want abortion rights protected or rejecting amendments that did away with protections.

Last Tuesday’s election result shows that voters are smart enough not to fall for a sneaky ruse to make it more difficult to pass abortion protections. Even some Republicans balked at this anti-democratic attempt to hamper the ability of people to change their state constitution. Four former Ohio governors — two Democrats and two Republicans — spoke out against Issue 1.

When the issue of abortion is put in the hands of state voters, they have chosen to protect it. The Ohio measure was rejected by 57% of the voters, which mirrors the 57.6% of Ohioans who said in a recent poll they support the abortion rights constitutional amendment. Nearly 700,000 early in-person and mail ballots were cast. That’s more than twice the early votes cast in the 2022 Ohio primaries. When will Republican leaders stop being so myopic and realize that trying to take away abortion rights is a colossal failure at the polls?

This editorial first appeared in the Los Angeles Times. This commentary should be considered another point of view and not necessarily the opinion or editorial policy of The Dominion Post.