Tuesday night’s election is being viewed as a big win for women candidates and reproductive rights.
Nearly 17 months after the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, abortion rights supporters celebrated in Ohio after voters added the right to access abortion care to the state’s constitution.
Meanwhile, in deep-red Kentucky, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear won re-election after making support for abortion rights a cornerstone of his campaign. And in Virginia, Democrats kept their majority in the state Senate and flipped the state House, a move that’s being seen as backlash to Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin who put a 15-week abortion ban at the center of his campaign.
State abortion bans could affect where Americans choose to go to college: poll
“We’ve learned in recent history that women voters decide our general election and I think not only does it reaffirm, but it gives a clear roadmap to both activists and candidates talking about keeping this issue on the forefront,” said Huma Abedin, an MSNBC contributor and longtime aide to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Thursday’s “Morning Joe.”









