The Atlantic

Virginia Could Decide the Future of the GOP’s Abortion Policy

The issue played a central role in blunting the widely anticipated red wave in last November’s midterm elections.
Students for Life Action volunteers canvas a neighborhood as they campaign for Mark Earley Jr., a candidate in the Republican primary election for the Virginia House of Delegates, in North Chesterfield, Virginia, on June 17, 2023.
Source: Photo by Bastien Inzaurralde / AFP / Getty

A crucial new phase in the political struggle over abortion rights is unfolding in suburban neighborhoods across Virginia.

An array of closely divided suburban and exurban districts around the state will decide which party controls the Virginia state legislature after next month’s election, and whether Republicans here succeed in an ambitious attempt to reframe the politics of abortion rights that could reverberate across the nation.

After the Supreme Court overturned the nationwide right to abortion in 2022, the issue played a central role in blunting the widely anticipated Republican red wave in last November’s midterm elections. Republican governors and legislators who passed abortion restrictions in GOP-leaning states such as Florida, Texas, Ohio, and Iowa did not face any meaningful backlash from voters, as I’ve written. But plans to retrench abortion rights did prove a huge hurdle last year for Republican candidates who lost gubernatorial and Senate races in Democratic-leaning and swing states such as Colorado, Washington, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Arizona.

Now Virginia Republicans, led by Governor Glenn Youngkin, are attempting to formulate a position that they believe will prove more palatable to voters outside the red heartland. In the current

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