Tracking anti-abortion candidates in today's primaries
In Kansas, Michigan, Missouri and Washington there are 38 candidates whose campaign websites use the phrase "pro-life," "sanctity of life," "right to life," "protect life," "no abortion," "against abortion" or "unborn" and do not say abortion is an issue of states' rights. As usual, we'll be tracking how they do tonight.
Despite being a reliably red state, Kansas has become a frequent battleground for abortion rights. In August 2022, shortly after Roe v. Wade fell, Kansas voters famously rejected a referendum that would have removed abortion protections from the state constitution. But some restrictions remain, including a ban on abortions after 22 weeks of pregnancy. In the past two years, the state's Republican legislative majority has tried to pass even more restrictions, which have been rejected by the Democratic governor and shot down by the state Supreme Court. At least one Republican in each of the state's four congressional districts is running on an explicitly anti-abortion platform, including two of the five candidates in the 2nd District's open-seat race.
Abortion was banned in Missouri when a trigger law passed in 2019 went into effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned. But this year, voters may have the chance to pass a ballot measure that would restore abortion rights in the state. Polls suggest a plurality of voters in the state support the measure, but nearly a fifth remain unsure about it. But in line with the state's red lean, all three leading Republican candidates for the wide-open governor's race (Ashcroft, Keho and Eigel) are on our anti-abortion candidates list. The same is true of front-runners Onder and Schaefer in the solid-red 3rd District, where we're also keeping a close eye on an open-seat GOP primary.
Abortion is protected in Michigan and Washington. Accordingly, more of the anti-abortion candidates running in these states are minor candidates, though the list includes embattled Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse, who's fending off two serious challengers from his right, and Sherry O'Donnell, a physician and pastor running for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in Michigan with far-right backing — though she'll have a hard time beating out Trump-endorsed former Rep. Mike Rogers in that race.
—Monica Potts, 538