Stripped bare, the drone strike that killed Al Qaeda鈥檚 leader in Afghanistan鈥檚 capital exposes a lack of trust between the U.S. and Taliban. But was their agreement broken, or were there just differing views on how to keep it?
鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter with Kansas?鈥 The 2004 bestseller by liberal commentator Thomas Frank chronicled the rise of populist conservatism in his home state 鈥 and by extension, the United States. Now abortion-rights opponents must be asking themselves the same question: How could conservative Kansas have voted Tuesday to keep the state鈥檚 constitutional right to abortion?
It wasn鈥檛 even close. Some 59% of Kansans voted against an amendment that would have allowed the state鈥檚 supermajority Republican legislature to tighten restrictions or ban abortion outright. Legislators had scheduled the referendum for primary day, with typically low turnout that gives the most motivated voters outsize influence.
Turns out it was abortion-rights supporters 鈥 mostly Democrats and unaffiliated voters, and yes, many Republicans 鈥 who were more motivated,聽. MSNBC鈥檚 Steve Kornacki suggests聽
In this first test of voter sentiment since the Supreme Court overturned the nationwide right to abortion, there are lessons for everyone.
Foremost, Kansas reminds us that voters do not necessarily embrace their party鈥檚 entire platform. Some Republicans lean libertarian on social issues 鈥 that is, they don鈥檛 want the government telling people what to do on personal matters. They may oppose abortion for themselves or loved ones, but aren鈥檛 comfortable with tough restrictions or bans.
Second, Kansas showed the power of organizing. The high court鈥檚 June 24 ruling overturning Roe v. Wade was 鈥渁 wakeup call for a lot of moderate Kansans who weren鈥檛 engaged on this issue because they thought there was federal protection for abortion care,鈥 Ashley All of Kansans for Constitutional Freedom, the main organization opposing the amendment,聽
After June 24, more than 500 people a week volunteered to do voter outreach, up from 44 volunteers a week, Ms. All added. With nearby states severely restricting or banning abortion, Kansas has become a regional hub for the procedure.
Kansans who support abortion rights are angry 鈥 rocket fuel for voter mobilization. 鈥淎nger is the best motivator for turnout,鈥 says Democratic pollster Celinda Lake.
But Tuesday鈥檚 vote does not necessarily foretell Democratic success in November. The economy remains issue No. 1 for most, though views on abortion could swing close races.
Anti-abortion forces are undaunted. Value Them Both, a pro-amendment group,聽: 鈥淭his outcome is a temporary setback, and our dedicated fight to value women and babies is far from over.鈥