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In Ohio, abortion battle triggers fight over direct democracy

Across Ohio, activists are urging voters to turn out in a special election next month to decide what The Columbus Dispatch calls “one of the most significant questions” in generations. The measure, called Issue 1, would make it harder for voters to amend the state constitution. 

Behind this battle over direct democracy is one issue: abortion. Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade last year, abortion policy has become a state-by-state matter. And both sides are increasingly focusing on state constitutions. Last year, voters in Kentucky and Kansas rejected amendments to their constitutions that would have stated there was no right to an abortion. In Michigan and California, voters approved making abortion an explicit constitutional right.

Why We Wrote This

With abortion policy now up to states, activists are looking to state constitutions as a way to guarantee or deny rights. And that’s leading to battles over how easily constitutions can be amended.

Ohio is looming as the next high-profile test. An amendment on November’s ballot would guarantee a right to abortion in the state constitution. August’s special election is widely seen as an attempt to make it harder for that amendment to pass.

“This is primarily about abortion,” says former Gov. Ted Strickland, a Democrat. “They know if the people of Ohio have a chance to vote on this issue under current rules, it will pass – so they want to change the rules.” 

Beverly Johnson votes without fail in every local, state, and federal election. But she didn’t know much about Ohio’s upcoming special election until last week, when singer-songwriter John Legend showed up at her house.

“I was on the porch when he came up,” says Ms. Johnson, a home day care provider. “I just [stood] there with my mouth open.”

Mr. Legend was in the majority-Black Cincinnati neighborhood encouraging residents to turn out and vote against the sole item on the Aug. 8 ballot – a Republican-written proposal known as Issue 1, which would make it harder to amend Ohio’s Constitution.

Why We Wrote This

With abortion policy now up to states, activists are looking to state constitutions as a way to guarantee or deny rights. And that’s leading to battles over how easily constitutions can be amended.

Across the state, activists have been deploying celebrities and urging voters to turn out for what The Columbus Dispatch calls “one of the most significant questions Ohio voters will be asked in generations.” If it passes, Issue 1 would raise the threshold for approving constitutional amendments to 60%, up from a simple majority. It also would make it harder for citizens to put such measures on the ballot in the first place. 

Driving this battle over direct democracy is one issue in particular: abortion. Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s ending of 50 years of federal protection under Roe v. Wade, abortion policy has become a state-by-state matter. And supporters of abortion rights have been increasingly turning to language in state constitutions to try to preserve access, even in deep-red states.

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