General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOhio passes budget with radical abortion restrictions
On Thursday afternoon, the Ohio legislature approved a budget bill that includes several serious attacks on womens reproductive freedom. The proposed budget would defund Planned Parenthood, strip funding from rape crisis centers that give their clients information about abortion, force some abortion clinics to close, and require doctors to give women information about the fetal heartbeat before proceeding with an abortion. And voters arent exactly happy with it.
The majority of Ohio voters dont support the provisions in the state budget related to limiting womens reproductive rights, according to a new poll from Public Policy Polling (PPP). Fifty two percent of respondents dont support the budget specifically because it seeks to defund Planned Parenthood, a move that would limit thousands of Ohio womens access to preventative care and family planning services. And 52 percent also oppose the budget provision that would impose harsh requirements on abortion providers, ultimately forcing some clinics to shut down.
<snip>
Gov. Kasich is now the last thing that stands between Ohio women and the proposed abortion restrictions. Womens health advocates delivered 17,000 petitions to the governor on Thursday asking him to veto the controversial budget amendments but he hasnt yet indicated whether he plans to reject them. Ill look at the language, keeping in mind that Im pro-life, the governor said earlier this week when reporters asked him about his plans for the fetal heartbeat amendment.
Ohios battle over stringent abortion restrictions comes on the heels of a similar fight in Texas, where hundreds of activists rallied to help Sen. Wendy Davis (D-TX) successfully delay a vote on a package of anti-abortion measures. But public opinion doesnt necessarily translate into legislative action on womens health issues. Even though 80 percent of Texans dont want their lawmakers to focus on restricting reproductive rights, Gov. Rick Perry (R) is doing everything he can to push through more abortion restrictions anyway.
http://thinkprogress.org/health/2013/06/28/2230971/ohio-voters-dont-support-abortion-amendments/
CrispyQ
(36,478 posts)cali
(114,904 posts)It will be challenged. Hopefully, successfully.
MotherPetrie
(3,145 posts)colsohlibgal
(5,275 posts)To borrow Thomas Frank's phrase, what's wrong with Ohio? You have blue areas like Columbus and NE Ohio but lots of rural red areas. Dirt poor southern counties who keep voting for the people most responsible for making and keeping them dirt poor. It never seems to amaze me. My maternal grandmother was one of them, dirt poor and a life long red hot republican.
This phenomenon is a huge reason, along with gerrymandering, why it's hard for dems to get a majority in the US House and State Houses. They win more counties, more area.