Ohio voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly rejected Issue 1, a Republican-backed ballot measure that would have raised the threshold of support for state constitutional amendments from 50% to 60%.
To outsiders, that might sound like an abstract ballot measure about the details of majority rule and how democracy should function. But most Ohioans saw it for what it was, and for what some Ohio Republicans openly acknowledged it was: an attempt to keep Ohioans from voting for abortion rights.
In a state presidential candidate Donald Trump won by 8 points twice, voters defeated a Republican maneuver to block abortion rights by a remarkable 14 point margin.
Republicans put the measure up as a cynical effort to block the passage of a November ballot measure that will give Ohioans the opportunity to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution. If Tuesday’s ballot measure had passed, then voters who favored abortion rights would’ve had a higher, maybe even impossible, bar to meet in order to secure those rights in November.
One doesn’t have to read between the lines to see that: Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose openly admitted that was the strategy. And that strategy, of course, tracks with the GOP’s tendency to make the democratic process more cumbersome as a way to shield its policy agenda from the will of the people.
Democrats should pay close attention to Ohio’s results. In a state presidential candidate Donald Trump won by 8 points twice, voters defeated a Republican maneuver to block abortion rights by a 14 point margin. Not everybody who voted against the ballot measure was looking to support abortion rights — some voters reportedly expressed objections to the sneakiness of the GOP strategy, for example. Still, abortion rights were top of mind for many voters, and many leading opponents of the ballot measure, just like LaRose did, framed the issue as being about abortion. Thus, Tuesday’s returns serve as yet another data point that abortion rights are a winning issue for Democrats that they’d be wise to lean into as the 2024 elections approach.
Ohio is not the only battleground state where the opportunity to support abortion rights has been shown to effectively mobilize voters. Judge Janet Protasiewicz’s dominant victory in Wisconsin’s state Supreme Court race in April was largely attributed to her support for abortion rights.








