PHOENIX โ Abortion access was on the ballot Tuesday and voters supported it in seven of 10 states nationwide, giving an overwhelming win for the abortion rights movement since the matter became a statesโ issue after the fall of Roe vs. Wade.
But the issueโs biggest proponent on a national ticket? She couldnโt win.
Vice President Kamala Harris, who made reproductive rights a cornerstone of her campaign, lost to former President Trump, who had repeatedly boasted about appointing the Supreme Court justices who were among the majority that scuttled Roe.
โPeople, I donโt think, felt they had to choose between Trump and their position on abortion,โ said Mary Ziegler, a legal historian and author of several books on abortion, including the forthcoming book โPersonhood: The New Civil War Over Reproduction.โ โThey thought they could have both.โ
A mix of red, blue and swing states handily passed measures related to restoring abortion access or codifying it in their state constitutions. Unsurprisingly, the measures succeeded in Colorado, New York and Maryland. But they also passed in Arizona, Nevada and in deep-red Missouri and Montana.
A ballot measure in Florida failed, despite getting 57% of the vote โ just shy of the 60% measure needed to pass. South Dakota and Nebraska voters declined to increase abortion access.
โIโm so excited that we won and โ putting that into context of everything else thatโs happened โ I feel almost guilty,โ said Chris Love, spokesperson for the โArizona for Abortion Accessโ campaign.
The future of abortion access under a second Trump administration remains unclear. If Republicans win both chambers in Congress โ they have already clinched the Senate โ they could try to bring legislation to ban abortion nationwide.
Trump could also enforce the Comstock Act, a law restricting abortion-related materials that has been on the books since 1873, although it not been used for decades.
โWithout question, Donald Trump is an existential threat to the health, well-being, privacy, and autonomy of women and pregnant people across the country,โ Jodi Hicks, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, said in a statement. โHis reelection is a devastating blow to reproductive freedom.โ
Trump could also put administrators who would move to restrict abortion access in charge of the Food and Drug Administration or the Department of Health and Human Services. Trump has said he would put Robert F. Kennedy Jr. โ his onetime opponent turned supporter โ in charge of health issues.
โBobby, I love you looking at health,โ Trump said at an event with Tucker Carlson last week at which Kennedy made an appearance. โI want you to take care of the women of this country, the men of this country and the children of this country.โ
Itโs also possible that Trump could decide to drop the issue of abortion altogether.
It could be โthat heโs just like, โYou know what? Forget it. Like, this whole abortion thing is an albatross, and I donโt want to deal with it, and I donโt really care anyway,โโ Ziegler said. โBut we just arenโt going to know.โ
Abortion has animated the national political conversation for decades, but it took on new importance in the Dobbs vs. Jackson Womenโs Health Organization case of 2022, when the Supreme Court โ with three conservative justices appointed by Trump โ overturned national abortion access protections under Roe. Suddenly, abortion access was thrust back into statesโ hands, creating a patchwork of laws across the nation.
Abortion rights activists decried the move and quickly organized to put abortion measures on state ballots, winning measures in Kansas, Michigan and Ohio. The Dobbs decision is also widely credited with helping to stave off a โred waveโ of victories in the 2022 midterm elections for Congress.
While Trump took credit for overturning Roe, he remained vague about where he stood on abortion in its aftermath. In April, he announced his position to โleave it to the states,โ in essence abdicating a strong stance on abortion access. Antiabortion advocates โ including many of his most ardent supporters among conservative evangelicals โ pushed him to go further, advocating for a national abortion ban.
Many of his supporters expressed disappointment when he waffled over how he would vote in Floridaโs repeal of a six-week abortion ban. When a reporter pressed Trump on Tuesday for how he voted on Floridaโs abortion ballot measure that would prevent any laws restricting abortion until fetal viability, he snapped, โYou should stop talking about that.โ
When Harris became the Democratic Partyโs last-minute nominee after President Biden abruptly left the race after a disastrous debate performance in June, she made reproductive rights a central pillar of her campaign, hoping to capitalize on the momentum of the 2022 wins.
Unlike Biden โ a Catholic who spoke less frequently about abortion as a candidate โ Harris spoke forcefully and passionately. She labeled statesโ laws limiting abortion access as โTrump abortion bans,โ and painted her opponent as someone who โdoes not believe women should have the agency and authority to make decisions about their own.โ
โWe trust women,โ she would tell her supporters at every campaign stop, eliciting some of their wildest cheers when she repeated her campaign promise: โIt is my pledge to you, when Congress passes a bill to restore reproductive freedom โ as the president of the United States, I will proudly sign it into law.โ
But Harris glossed over the details of how abortion legislation could pass Congress. And the fuzziness around a national measure, coupled with the fact that many states had already moved to protect abortion access, left some voters unconvinced, Ziegler said.
โI think a lot of voters didnโt believe Trumpโs statesโ rights line. They didnโt understand what Harris could do,โ Ziegler said. โAnd so then it was sort of like, โOK, well, I like Harrisโ position on abortion better, but what is that going to change in my life? Like, if Trump wins, eggs arenโt going to cost as much, and gas isnโt going to cost as much, and thatโs going to affect me.โโ
Unfortunately for Democrats, Ziegler said, they fell into the trap of believing that support for abortion rights would translate into widespread wins. Republicans could still fall into a trap of believing that abortion bans are popular, she added.
โI think we can read this as saying that anger about whatโs already happened on abortion wasnโt enough to bring Harris into office,โ Ziegler said. โBut I donโt think we can necessarily conclude that the abortion issue stopped being dangerous for Republicans.โ