Joe Biden’s campaign has been on quite the roller coaster ride this week. On Sunday came the release of six swing-state polls conducted by The New York Times and Siena College. There was not a shred of good news for the president in any of them, as Biden was losing to Trump in all but one state.
As usual, the media, along with some political operatives, went in to a full-throttle panic. Somehow they forgot that these were in fact swing states, which by their very nature will continue to fluctuate.
When protecting women’s reproductive health care is the focal point of a campaign, people come out to vote.
But on Tuesday night, the election results changed the political narrative. While Democrats celebrated Gov. Andy Beshear’s re-election in Kentucky, the dominant story was the victory for abortion rights in Ohio and Virginia. Those wins are significant, yet they should come as no surprise after a decisive win for abortion rights in Kansas last year. When protecting women’s reproductive health care is the focal point of a campaign, people come out to vote.
Since Kansas, Democrats have seen record turnout in special elections, most notably the Wisconsin Supreme Court race earlier this year. The winner, Judge Janet Protasiewicz, successfully ran on protecting abortion rights, whereas her opponent was backed by the state’s anti-abortion groups. (By the way, the only state where Biden was ahead in the polls mentioned above, but within the margin of error, was… yup, you guessed it: Wisconsin.)
Now, the question is what should the Biden campaign do with this information? The answer is simple: For the next year, protecting abortion rights must be front and center. And that could mean investing in states like Florida, which had previously been written off as too far out of reach.
If the most recent GOP presidential debate is any indication, Republicans haven’t a clue how to handle the issue. The candidates were all over the place. It was like watching bumper cars colliding into each other and ending up in a total jam that gets untangled by an attendant.
All the while, the likely Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump, continues to struggle with the issue. One day he’s writing on his social media account, “I was able to kill Roe v. Wade,” the next he’s saying that the six-week abortion ban that Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law was a “terrible mistake.”
Looking to 2024, the Biden campaign needs to get its voters motivated in a very big way. Giving people data points won’t work — people need to feel that their vote will make a difference. In 2020, that was preventing Trump from getting a second term; 2022 was about protecting democracy. In 2024, it’s protecting women’s reproductive rights that will drive people to the polls.
In 2024, protecting abortion rights will not only be good policy, but also good politics. Arizona and Nevada, both swing states, are looking to put an amendment on the ballot to enshrine abortion rights in their state constitutions. Those efforts are likely to succeed, and voters will decide the fate of those amendments next November.
By contrast, one state has been struggling with its effort to get an abortion amendment on the ballot — Florida.








