US Ohio Voters Overwhelmingly Choose to Protect Abortion Rights

Link (Archive)

Ohio Voters Overwhelmingly Choose to Protect Abortion Rights​

Ohio voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure that will codify abortion rights in the state constitution, according to the New York Times. Issue 1—which will also enshrine the right to make decisions about birth control, miscarriage care, and fertility treatment—passed by a vote of 58% to 42%, with about 40% of the ballots in. An NBC News exit poll found that 60% of Ohio voters were unhappy with the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

The victory came despite Republicans waging an all-out misinformation campaign on the amendment by claiming it would do things like strip parental rights and allow rapists to force survivors to have abortions.

The pro-choice position has now won in all seven states that have put abortion on the ballot since the fall of Roe, with Ohio becoming the firstaffirmative” abortion victory in a Republican-leaning state. (Previous pro-choice wins in red states like Kansas and Kentucky came via voters rejecting anti-abortion measures with a “no” vote. Affirmative abortion votes have come in the heavily Democratic states of California, Michigan, and Vermont.) In 2020, Donald Trump won 53% of the vote in Ohio to Joe Biden’s 45%.

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D) told reporters before the race was called that Ohioans are pro-choice. Manu Raju tweeted that Brown told him: “Ohio has a 6-week ban. The Republicans have done all they can to obscure that, to make it sound like ‘we should be doing something reasonable, let the legislators do what they want.’ Voters reject that.”

Conservatives and activists desperately wanted to break their losing streak on statewide abortion votes, but Ohio lawmakers’ zeal to try to thwart the ballot measure may have come back to bite them. Buckeye state Republicans tried everythingto stop Issue 1, including authorizing an August special election on whether to raise the threshold that ballot measures need to pass from 50% to 60%. That effort failed by a stunning 14 points, and it cost the anti-abortion side a lot of time, money, and goodwill with voters. (A little more than 3 million voters turned out in August for that proxy vote on abortion.)

Gov. Mike DeWine (R) stayed out of the August election, but appeared in a lecturing ad claiming that Issue 1 is “just not right for Ohio.” DeWine obscured the fact that the ballot measure would be the deciding factor in whether a six-week abortion ban he signed in 2019 would snap back into effect, and he made other absurd claims about what would happen if people voted for it. DeWine won re-election last year by 25 points, but it appears people don’t care to listen to him when it comes to bodily autonomy.

Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (R), who is running to be the Republican nominee for Senate in 2024, also got involved. He ordered the purge of nearly 27,000 inactive voters in late September but didn’t announce the move as his office has done in the past. LaRose also drafted an amendment summary that appears at the top of the ballot that replaced the word “fetus” with “unborn child.” The state Supreme Court—where Gov. DeWine’s son Patrick serves as a justice—upheld the changes, and yet the amendment still passed.

In recent weeks, pro-choice supporters did begin to worry when two major newspapers made unexpected moves: The editorial board of Cleveland.com refused to take a side—instead allowing board members to write short essays on their stance—while the board at the Toledo Blade came out against Issue 1. But it appears those actions didn’t matter.

Ohioans have been waiting to hear if the state Supreme Court will uphold the currently blocked six-week abortion ban, but now that Issue 1 passed and the right to choose an abortion will go in the state constitution, the ban has no legal legsto stand on.

National groups seized on the Ohio election as a potential turning point. David Bereit, an anti-abortion activist who founded the group 40 Days for Life said during a webcast in late October that groups like his were banking a lot on the results. “This is not just Ohio’s struggle. For all of us, this is a national tipping point moment,” he said, per Politico. “The outcome here can and will dictate the trajectory for the entire United States, whether it’s to bolster or to thwart the abortion agenda from coast to coast.”
That trajectory is now decidedly pro-abortion.

Advocates in states including Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nevada are already working to get abortion measures on their ballots for 2024.
 
Why so upset? Guess who's getting aborted.

View attachment 5476502
While only accounting for 13% of the population (and shrinking) blacks account for almost 40% of all abortions. :story:

The dems pushing these laws now are making a tactical mistake. They should have done it in '24. They just saved Republicans from having to deal with a massive wedge issue that they don't have the numbers to win.
 
Well that sounds mighty unpleasant and I sure do hope that if it ever happens the Democrats have managed to make things a little easier on the working guy by pushing through that single-payer healthcare system the Republicans keep blocking.
The only people who kvetch about Muh Healthcare are deathfats, Munchie hypochondriacs, and shuffling Boomer mummies who should've naturally croaked decades ago.

In other words, those who take care of themselves shouldn't be financially resppnsible for those that don't.
 
Might be worth looking up actual statistics for crimes before making everything up. This is from 2018 but as far as I can tell it hasn't changed much:

crimes.png


From quick bit of reading it seems that
1) rapists are usually acquaintances but not always
2) if you come from a crime riddled background in a crime riddled area you are much more likely to encounter an acquaintance who is a rapist and a criminal in general.

Could not find any stats on immigration status.
 
Look, something concrete, I can work with this.
Depends on the state. Some states, like Wyoming, have no minimum age requirements. Read the link.
Looks like that vast majority of the US is either 16, 17, or 18. Wyoming shows as 16 on that map, oddly Progressive bastions of Washington and California show no limit though. Same with New Mexico and Oklahoma, not really a shock to be honest. Mississippi is not surprising. Hawaii at 15. I imagine youngest marriage age matches up with Age of Consent. If they're like Ohio 17 is the age of Consent, but you can still get nailed with Corruption of a Minor instead of Statuary.
 
Any article on abortion summons AR. It’s like witchcraft, but instead of summoning something cool like a demon, you just get a sperg.
you just gotta summon her for the right stuff, like space aids
you summon The Demon Of Setting Stuff On Fire to go check out a water park, guess what, he's gonna be in a shitty mood too
 
Is that sprinkles on toast? I know this is a thread about abortions, but that's too far
Aussies shouldn’t get on American’s cases for adding too much sugar to bread when one of the foods they are known for is sprinkles on bread. Even worse, it’s called “fairy bread,” so you might become gay if you eat it. Still would try it at least once though, not gonna lie
 
the incels on A&N's brains short circuit when theres a conflict between hating women and hating niggers. they usually just change the topic.
If the choice is killing babies and not killing babies, I think the answer is pretty easily "not killing babies".

Fuck the retards that voted for this in Ohio.
 
Back