In the first Republican presidential primary debate, several candidates boasted about their opposition to abortion rights. Soon after, Ronna McDaniel, the chair of the Republican National Committee, told Fox News she was “very pleased“ with the comments.
“If our candidates aren’t able to find a response and put out a response, we’re not going to win,” the party chair said.
The problem for the party, of course, is that reproductive rights are already preventing the party from winning, whether Republicans want to admit it or not. NBC News’ Adam Edelman explained overnight:
Abortion rights keep winning and winning at the ballot box — and on Tuesday, winning some more. Nearly 17 months after the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, the hot streak enjoyed by candidates and ballot measures backing abortion rights continued in a collection of states in very different places across the political spectrum.
This framing struck me as notable — and accurate — because it’s important not to see the latest Democratic victories in isolation. There’s a pattern, and it matters.
Two years ago this week, Republicans were optimistic, and their positive attitudes were grounded in fact. The 2020 election cycle was largely a disaster for the GOP — voters put Democrats in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress — but in 2021, Republicans fared very well in Virginia, winning up and down the ballot, and nearly pulled off an unexpected upset in New Jersey’s gubernatorial race. Party strategists looked ahead and saw a bright future.
Seven months later, Republican-appointed justices on the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. As we’ve discussed, Democrats were confident that the ruling would spark an electoral backlash. GOP officials heard the predictions — and scoffed.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell told NPR that he expected voters’ interests to lie elsewhere. A day earlier, Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said something similar, telling The Wall Street Journal, “I just don’t think this is going to be the big political issue everybody thinks it is.”
Oops.









