Talking About Abortion On The Campaign Trail

Primary Topic

This episode explores the dynamic role of abortion in shaping the 2024 U.S. election, reflecting on its significance in voter behavior and policy discussions.

Episode Summary

In this pivotal episode of the NPR Politics Podcast, hosts Susan Davis, Danielle Kurtzleben, and Mara Liasson delve into the charged topic of abortion in the context of the 2024 elections. The discussion is framed by the backdrop of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, emphasizing the shift of abortion law decisions back to the states. The hosts examine how both major U.S. political parties are leveraging the issue, with Democrats focusing on protecting abortion rights to galvanize their base, while Republicans aim to emphasize other issues like the economy and immigration. The episode is rich with insights from recent polls, illustrating a complex landscape where a majority supports abortion legality, yet nuances exist that complicate the electoral impact. The conversation also touches on the strategic uses of abortion in campaign narratives, portraying it as a broader symbol of freedom and rights, beyond just the right to terminate a pregnancy.

Main Takeaways

  1. Abortion remains a pivotal issue in U.S. politics, influencing voter behavior significantly post-Dobbs decision.
  2. Public opinion favors legal abortion in most cases, but political utilization of the issue varies between parties.
  3. Democrats are framing abortion as a broader issue of freedoms, contrasting Republican policies perceived as restrictive.
  4. Despite its significance, the percentage of voters prioritizing abortion as their top issue remains relatively low.
  5. The discussion of abortion rights extends into broader reproductive issues, including access to birth control and IVF.

Episode Chapters

1: Introduction

Hosts introduce the episode’s focus on abortion politics in the 2024 election. Susan Davis: "And today, abortion politics and how they're shaping the 2024 election."

2: Political Implications of Abortion

Discussion on how abortion is used politically by both parties. Mara Liasson: "Democrats are going to be talking about it a lot between now and election day."

3: Voter Perspectives and Poll Data

Analyzing new polling data on public opinion regarding abortion. Danielle Kurtzleben: "54% think Biden would better handle abortion than Trump."

4: Abortion as a Campaign Issue

Exploring former President Trump’s campaign rhetoric on abortion and its reception. Susan Davis: "It's remarkable... that the republican candidate for president is also campaigning and saying he will not sign a federal abortion ban."

5: Closing Remarks

The hosts summarize the episode’s discussions and implications for the upcoming elections. Susan Davis: "And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics podcast."

Actionable Advice

  1. Stay informed about your state’s stance on abortion and reproductive rights.
  2. Engage in local and national elections to voice your stance on abortion rights.
  3. Support organizations that align with your views on reproductive rights.
  4. Educate others about the importance of understanding comprehensive reproductive rights.
  5. Participate in community discussions to foster a broader understanding of the implications of abortion laws.

About This Episode

Nearly two years after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, abortion has been playing a large role in campaign messaging. We explore how both Democratic and Republican candidates are using the issue to shape their pitches to voters.

This episode: political correspondent Susan Davis, political correspondent Danielle Kurtzleben, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson.

The podcast is produced by Jeongyoon Han, Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our intern is Bria Suggs. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.

People

Susan Davis, Danielle Kurtzleben, Mara Liasson

Companies

None

Books

None

Guest Name(s):

None

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Kayla
This message comes from NPR's sponsor, progressive Insurance, where drivers who switch could save hundreds on car insurance. Get your quote@progressive.com today, progressive casualty insurance company and affiliates.

Hi, this is Kayla calling from Chicago. Four years ago today, one day before my master's degree graduation from Northwestern University and two days before my wedding, I wrote and planned to record an NPR timestamp. But I forgot and I've regretted it ever since.

Susan Davis
The time now is 112 pm on Thursday, June 20.

Kayla
Things may have changed by the time you hear this. My education and marital status will be the same, but I will have finally crossed an NPR timestamp off my bucket list. Enjoy the show.

Susan Davis
I like to think we rank number one on that list, timestamp, marriage, education.

Danielle Kurtzleben
We are at the top priority over here.

Susan Davis
Hey there. It's the NPR politics podcast. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.

Danielle Kurtzleben
I'm Danielle Kurtzleben. I cover the presidential campaign.

Mara Liasson
And I'm Mara Liasson, senior national political correspondent.

Susan Davis
And today, abortion politics and how they're shaping the 2024 election. It's been nearly two years since the Supreme Court's landmark decision to overturn Roe v. Wade and hand back to individual states the power to decide abortion access laws. Mara, if Republicans want this election to be a referendum on the economy and immigration, it seems pretty clear that Democrats would much probably rather this election be about abortion access.

Mara Liasson
Absolutely. Now, this election is going to be about a couple things. It is going to be about the economy, probably, number one. And then it's going to be about issues like immigration, which works for Republicans, and abortion, which works for Democrats. And that's why Democrats are going to be talking about it a lot between now and election day.

Susan Davis
Danielle, we have new polling data out. What does it tell us about where the electorate is right now on this issue?

Danielle Kurtzleben
Sure. So when it comes to abortion, the NPR PBS News Marist pollution shows that a majority of voters, 54%, think Biden would better handle abortion than Trump. Trump got 42%. And across a lot of polls, abortion is one of the few issues where Biden really does better than Trump and quite markedly better than Trump and regularly better than him on these polls. So that also reflects a just broader trend that we have seen in recent polls, especially post Dobbs, but even a bit pre, which is Americans lean towards abortion being legal in all or most cases. Looking at Pew data, for example, from this year, from April, nearly two thirds, 63% of Americans believe that abortion should be legal. In all or most cases, 36 believe illegal. But poll numbers mask so much subtlety.

Susan Davis
DanIelle I'm glad you brought up that point about polling being tricky, because in our own polling, it shows about 8% of voters say that abortion has been their number one issue. And that's been static for most of 2024, which, on one hand, would seem to suggest that abortion is really not a top issue for a lot of voters. But we know the evidence suggests otherwise. In elections and referendums and ballot choices since the 2022 DoBbs decision, abortion does seem to be a much bigger voter motivator than polls might suggest.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Yes, and I think there are two ways to look at how abortion factors into voters decisions. One is to look at that result. You just mentioned. 8% list abortion as their top issue. And just look at that in a very plain, unnuanced way, that even if you have voters who lean towards abortion being legal in all or most cases, but who don't have abortion, top of mind, they might well vote for Donald Trump. And that is quite true of one voter that I talked to this spring at a Donald Trump rally in Michigan. This is a young man named J. Andrew Beckwith. He's 30, and I asked him about reproductive rights.

J. Andrew Beckwith
I'm pro choice. Personally. A lot of people, a lot of guys are not. I think it's important to protect women's rights and reproductive rights. However, I also don't think it's a number one, two, or three issue.

Danielle Kurtzleben
So this guy flat out saying, look, I care, but also, there are other things I care more about. Therefore, I'm going to vote for Trump. But there's another way of looking at this and that I don't think you have a lot of voters who wander into the voting booth or who pull their ballot from their mailbox and think, gosh, what is my number one issue? And therefore, who am I voting for? I think a lot about something that a democratic strategist told me in 2022, the midterms, then right after DOBBS and that strategist told me that Democrats took abortion and made it about more than abortion. They made it about Republicans extremism. So if you use abortion as, for example, an object lesson, and, hey, here's why you should or shouldn't vote for x party, then abortion becomes about a lot more.

Mara Liasson
Yeah. And you know, the other thing abortion becomes a lot about is freedom. And the Democrats, for a change, actually have a freedom message, the freedom to choose, which is something you're gonna hear a lot from Democrats, much bigger than abortion. Donald Trump and the Republicans want to restrict your rights across the board.

Susan Davis
Mara, it's an interesting issue, because on the policy of it, Democrats feel that they're in a really strong position.

But it's also notable that this is not an issue that falls into President Joe Biden's comfort zone on politics. He doesn't personally seem to seek out many opportunities to talk about this, to campaign on it, even though on the policy he very much supports what Democrats are trying to do here.

Mara Liasson
That's right. It's always better to have a woman delivering the message on abortion anyway. And Vice President Harris has done that, and there have been a lot of other female surrogates for him. So I don't think it's that much of a disadvantage that he doesn't talk about it all the time personally. But the message that you're going to hear a lot of is that the freedom to choose is not about abortion. It's not about not having a child or not bringing a pregnancy to term. It's about keeping your fertility. And as soon as IVF entered the abortion debate, IVF is all about having more kids, not fewer kids.

Susan Davis
I think you, I'm glad you brought that up because I do think, especially since the DoBBS decision, this isn't just about abortion access anymore. This debate has become a broader debate about reproductive rights, access to birth control, access to IVF.

Mara Liasson
Right.

Susan Davis
And generally speaking, those issues do still tend to bend towards the democratic position.

Mara Liasson
And don't forget, the Republicans in the Senate just blocked a measure that would have protected access to IVF.

Danielle Kurtzleben
And to add to all of that, I think part of what you're seeing here is what is the difference between fighting the status quo or being more fine with the status quo? Right. For a very long time, Republicans, and especially the white evangelicals in their base, they spent decades saying, well, whatever we want on abortion, it sure ain't what we got. We don't like Roe. We want to get rid of it, then we'll figure, we'll go from there. And now there is serious debate among Republicans, among people on the right about, okay, do we like IVF, yes or no? Do we believe in fetal personhood? Yes or no?

Those kinds of debates within a movement very much also had happened among people who support abortion rights. But right now, people on the left, people in the Democratic Party, people who support abortion rights, those differences between them have kind of vanished. It's mainly just like, hey, what we got right now, we don't like it. We want Roe back.

Susan Davis
All right. Let's take a quick break and we'll talk more about this when we get back.

Rachel Martin
I'm Rachel Martin after hosting Morning Edition for years, I know that the news can wear you down. So we made a new podcast called Wildcard, where a special deck of cards and a whole bunch of fascinating guests help us sort out what makes life meaningful. It's part game show, part existential deep dive, and it is seriously fun. Join me on Wildcard wherever you get your podcasts, only from NPR.

Kayla
This message comes from NPR sponsor Carvana. With thousands of options under $20,000, plus customizable financing terms and down payments as low as $0 down, it's easy to find a car that fits your lifestyle. Visit carvana.com or download the app today. Terms and conditions may apply.

Mara Liasson
Rickwood Field is the oldest baseball field in the US. It's also where comedian Roy Wood Junior spent a lot of time growing up. Racism was around, but his baseball field somehow was a separate oasis from all of that for blacks and whites, baseball, Birmingham and racing America on the latest episode of the Sunday Story from NPR's up first podcast.

Peter Sagel
The Bullseye podcast is, according to one journalist, the, quote, kind of show people listen to in a more perfect world. So make your world more perfect every week. Bullseye puts the pop in culture, interviewing brilliant authors, musicians, actors and novelists. To keep you on your pop culture target. Listen to the Bullseye podcast only from NPR and maximum fun.

Susan Davis
And we're back. And Danielle, I'm curious about how much former President Trump is campaigning on the issue of abortion. As someone who has traveled to his rallies and has been talking to his supporters, how central to his core message.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Is the issue of abortion, not terribly. And when it does come up, his tune on it almost never changes. He generally says when he brings it up that, hey, the Supreme Court overturned Roe and now it went back to the states. Aren't you glad about that? Everybody likes that, he says, which, I mean, fact check, that's a little debatable, but yeah. And of course, his crowds love it, but he doesn't always bring it up. I was just going through his speech in Racine, Wisconsin, this week. It didn't come up in that speech. So it's certainly not one of his central things, which are, you know, other culture war issues like transgender athletes and sports and also, of course, immigration.

Susan Davis
Mara, I try never to use the words unprecedented or extraordinary anymore because I feel like those words have no meaning in modern politics. But I do still think it is worth pausing to make the point that it is pretty remarkable and unprecedented and amazing in modern politics that the republican candidate for president is also campaigning and saying he will not sign a federal abortion ban. That is not a position that a republican presidential candidate could have had since Roe.

Mara Liasson
No, but he can say that because Republicans, at least for now, have won the war. Now they might lose the battle. I mean, they're dealing with all the negative consequences of winning. Like I said, they worked for 50 years to overturn Roe and they finally did. But the thing that Trump does that's so interesting to me is he is running an almost completely base oriented campaign.

He hasn't tempered his rhetoric at all about January 6. He's talked as harshly about immigrants as he ever had. Abortion is the only issue where he has, quote, moved to the middle. And his move to the middle is, of course, to repeat over and over again, it's up to the states. They will ask him questions like, is it okay for states to track women's pregnancy? And he'll say, well, it doesn't matter what I think. The states can do whatever they want. I don't know how far that gets him.

Susan Davis
Danielle, I always think it's important to remember that this isn't just about the presidential. You and I today were just listening in on a call with democratic campaign chairs. And it's very clear that Democrats think that the abortion issue is critical to both their chances of holding on to control of the Senate, Senate and possibly taking control of the House.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Yes, totally. And there is something really interesting that was said on this call by democratic Senator Tina Smith from Minnesota. She was saying that because of a law that we have talked about on this podcast before, it's called the Comstock act. It is currently on the books. And were it interpreted in a particular, quite conservative way, it is possible, say some legal experts, that it could. And the mailing of abortion pills, which account for more than half of abortions, or even that it could quite overwhelmingly curtail abortion nationwide. And so she said, listen, even if you've passed a law, a ballot measure in your state protecting abortion, that might not be enough.

Tina Smith
If you live in a state where right now you feel that your rights are protected because of action that your governor and state legislature have taken, forget about it. Because a Donald Trump as president has believes wrongly, that he has the power to roll that all away.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Now she's going to get Donald Trump there, of course. But also, this has big repercussions in all those other state races, right? Like, for example, Arizona, where there may be such a thing on the ballot. Florida, where it is on the ballot for this fall. But besides that, they're also very much making the case that, hey, Biden says he wants to codify Roe. Well, you'd better elect us if you really want that to happen. But I know, sue, that you can tell us that that's not necessarily easier said than. Yeah.

Susan Davis
Yeah.

Mara Liasson
Well, the two states to really watch are the two battleground states, Arizona for sure, and Nevada, because that is what Democrats hope will boost abortion rights turnout. I mean, we don't think it'll make a difference, much of a difference in Montana and Ohio, which is where the two embattled democratic Senate incumbents are running for reelection.

Susan Davis
I mean, that's an important point, too. I mean, abortion matters. It matters a lot in politics until it doesn't. I think that it's important to remember that republican governors like Mike DeWine in Ohio and Brian Kemp in Georgia handily won re election despite signing restrictive abortion laws. When you're talking about Texas and Florida, Ted Cruz is up for reelection. Rick Scott, both republican senators, they're heavily favored to win despite their own states having restrictive abortion laws. I mean, it's an issue that bends towards Democrats, but it's important to remember that it doesn't mean electoral defeat for a republican candidate. They can outrun popular opinion on this issue.

Mara Liasson
That's right. But there's also a flip side to that in very, very red states like Kansas, where a statewide referendum enshrining abortion rights in the constitution passed overwhelmingly. Kansas isn't any less read, but you have to assume that a lot of anti abortion rights voters voted for that referendum. In other words, they were not willing to make Kansas a constitutionally anti abortion state because they care about freedom or some other reason. But it's a complicated issue.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Well, and that also gets back to the priorities question, right. Is that if abortion is not your top priority, maybe it won't sway you against Trump, but you very well might be a person who would vote for Trump but also would vote for a ballot measure for abortion rights in your state.

Mara Liasson
There are a lot of cross currents.

Danielle Kurtzleben
Complex voters out there. Yeah.

Susan Davis
All right. That is it for us today. We'll be back in your feeds tomorrow with the weekly roundup. I'm Susan Davis. I cover politics.

Danielle Kurtzleben
I'm Danielle Kurtzleben. I cover the presidential campaign.

Mara Liasson
And I'm Mara Liasson, senior national political correspondent.

Susan Davis
And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics podcast.

New from the embedded podcast, what happens when three republican women challenge their own party?

Danielle Kurtzleben
Maybe we need to speak out a little bit bolder. Maybe we need to do something to get people's attention.

Susan Davis
They have a front row seat to democracy. Now you do, too.

Listen to super majority from NPR's embedded and WPLn on wait, wait. Don't tell me our celebrity interviews aren't quite like anybody else's. For example, country star Brad Paisley has multiple Grammys, but do his teenaged kids like his songs? So we listened to it in the kitchen. And huck, my oldest, said, well, they.

Mara Liasson
Can'T all be gems.

Susan Davis
I'm Peter Sagel. Join us for the show that ask the the questions nobody else seems to want to know the answer to. Listen to the wait, wait, don't tell me podcast from NPR.

Kayla
Here at short wave space camp, we escape our everyday lives to explore the mysteries and quirks of the universe. We find weird, fun, interesting stories that explain how the cosmos is partying all around us from stars to dwarf planets to black holes and beyond. We've got you. Listen now to the shortwave podcast from NPR.