What Went Down During Ohio’s And Indiana’s Primary Elections
I also wonder if Democrats will really be that energized since they already voted in a Democratic-majority Congress that could have enshrined Roe as the law of the land at some point sooner than now.
Hello from ABC News’s political unit! Jacob, to build upon your point about Gov. DeWine and a possible lack of enthusiasm toward him, it seems like the state Democratic party is trying to capitalize on those potential pitfalls.
Ohio’s state Democratic and Republican parties have predictably opposite reactions on Twitter to DeWine’s win in the Republican gubernatorial primary. The GOP celebrated his win. But I noticed in particular that Ohio Dems tweeted that “Republicans and Democrats agree on one thing: @MikeDeWine is the wrong choice for Ohio.”
Ohio hasn’t had a Democratic governor since 2006, but it remains to be seen if the Democratic party and Whaley can indeed capitalize in November on the discontent they claim that Republicans have toward DeWine.
Of note as well, given yesterday’s seismic report on the Supreme Court’s draft opinion on abortion rights, is whether projected Democratic primary winner Nan Whaley can gain more steam now as a self-identified “genuinely pro-choice candidate.”
Yeah, what I wonder about, Monica, is whether this could shake up races in purple states. Because we’re not talking about a 15-week abortion ban, which I think would be easier for people to shrug off. Moreover, anti-abortion legislators are not including the exemptions that used to be standard in abortion bans — for rape, incest, life of the mother. That could make a difference for voters who maybe haven’t been as concerned about abortion rights previously.
