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Americans: What impact did the SC decision to overturn Roe Vs Wade impact the mid-terms?

I'm interested.
There was a surge in people registering to vote after that and most of them were women. So I think it played a big role.
justanothername · 51-55, M
It spurred a lot of women who wouldn’t have bothered to get out and have their say about having a choice.
BlueVeins · 22-25
Hard to say, given all the other crazy shit republicans were doing contemporaneously, but as Bohemian said, there was a huge surge in women registering to vote, so infer from that what you will.
beckyromero · 36-40, F
It shows that women can lie to pollsters, too, just as Trumpets do.
About 39% of the time...no matter how good of a prez is in...or how much the people like him............histrionically the Senate and House or both flips ownership at the midterms. So it would be impossible to point to any one thing for why a shift actually occurs. Nearly 40% of the time in history things have flipped literally for no reason. It did for Obama...and it did for Trump....etc. So to nail down any one thing....like R vs W to explain things would be a shot in the dark. The best history shows us is that the public is NEVER satisfied with who is in office for longer than 2 years at a time before they change their minds.
justanothername · 51-55, M
@anythingoes477 Normally I’d agree with you but usually mid terms don’t really rate a mention in the news. How ever throw in some recent defining events and millions of Americans get fired up enough to have their say.

Had it not been for the Trumpster stirring the pot this mid term could have just as easily been a boring garden variety campaign.
@anythingoes477 5 states had abortion on the ballot.

5 for 5 voted to keep it legal even red state Kentucky.

Yea it played a huge part
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@justanothername [quote]usually mid terms don’t really rate a mention in the news. How ever throw in some recent defining events and millions of Americans get fired up enough to have their say[/quote] I think this is the most significant factor: usually the midterms have an even lighter voter turnout than most U.S. elections, so it becomes the current economy and buyer's regret because the honeymoon with the new President is over. But just as the chaos of Trump's term in office -- not voter fraud -- led to the largest turnout in history for the 2020 Presidential election, all the crazy antics stirred up by the MAGA crowd focused attention on the midterms and led to extremely large midterm voter turnout. Abortion was a major part of this, but not the sole factor with all the election denial and culture war silliness being thrown about.
Good question, but I dont think there's going to be a clear answer. There's just too much else going on for me to buy that any pollster or social scientist's quantifications are worth much.


I'm sure it contributed, but the only poll that really counts is the big one, and now, at least I hope, it's an academic excercise and not major fodder for litigation and violence.
I think that it did. The decision divided the country.
ron122 · 41-45, M
Seems like it had a big impact.
Northwest · M
It energized white, less educated women, to vote for the GOP. Based on the polls, Hispanic men and women were also more likely to vote GOP as a result of SC decision. That played in favor of the GOP and the MAGA crowd.
i think it helped the left rally enough to make a diffferecne
justanothername · 51-55, M
The Trumpster pissed off a bunch of influential women prior to the elections and he paid the price.
FreeLilly · 18-21, F
snapchat ?
legodood · M
@FreeLilly sc is south carolina and there is also nc north carolina

 
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