Conservatives have been triumphantly pointing to two new polls–one commissioned by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal, another by ABC News and the Washington Post, showing either a plurality or majority of Americans supporting 20 week abortion bans–as proof that Wendy Davis’ heralded Texas filibuster was out of step with the country. Or, as The Examiner’s Tim Carney put it on Twitter, they’re “#NotStandingWithWendy.” Even before these numbers were released, Marco Rubio, who recently reiterated his desire to sponsor a 20-week ban in the Senate to Politico, said that Democrats “love to cite polls all the time–and, well, I don’t live by polls–but polls indicate that the vast majority of Americans believe that after 20 weeks, abortion should be limited.”
Does that mean that the GOP will overcome Democrats’ “war on women” rhetoric, which helped win the last national election? Nope.
For one thing, Davis was protesting an omnibus abortion bill that also included provisions its own supporters bragged would shut down the majority of Texas’ abortion clinics, among other restrictions. The ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 54% of Americans oppose those.
But more broadly, the polls tell us nothing anyone who has been watching this issue closely didn’t already know. When you ask Americans if they want abortion to be mostly legal, a majority say they do, though “mostly” is an undefined concept. When you ask Americans if they support later abortion, whether that’s defined as the second trimester, the third, or the arbitrary 20-week guideline currently in vogue, many will say they don’t. (Whether that would change if respondents heard about the particular life circumstances of someone needing an abortion after 20 weeks–a teenager raised on abstinence-only education who didn’t know she was pregnant, a single mother who couldn’t afford or couldn’t access an earlier abortion, a wanted pregnancy with a diagnosis of grave fetal abnormality–well, I’ve never seen a large-sample poll like that in years of reporting on this.)
Indeed, the commentary on the ABC News/Washington Post poll notes that the basic numbers–55% of Americans saying abortion “should be legal in all or most cases,” 41% saying it should be “entirely or mostly illegal”–map with “their long term averages… in more than 30 ABC/Post polls since 1995.”
In short, very few minds have been changed on abortion in decades of attempts to revoke women’s access to it. The elected officials’ political struggle is over who gets the rep for being “extreme.” Republicans lost that skirmish last year in the presidential election and a handful of Senate races, because throwing around the word slut and opposing the expansion of contraceptive access registered as extreme with enough voters. Hence the sudden popularity of 20-week bans. They affect only 1.5% of abortions (per the Guttmacher statistics), which doesn’t do much for those who would like to ban them entirely, but they seemingly force Democrats to defend an unpopular position.









