Overturning Roe v. Wade Could Upend the Midterms
Leigh Ann Caldwell and Theodoric Meyer The Washington Post
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On the Hill
Abortion debate now promises to consume Washington ahead of midterms
The bombshell revelation on Monday night that the Supreme Court is preparing to strike down Roe v. Wade promises to consume Washington in the months ahead and reorder the midterm elections.
A draft opinion obliterating Roe was obtained by Politico’s Josh Gerstein and Alexander Ward. “Roe was egregiously wrong from the start,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the draft opinion.
Our colleagues Robert Barnes and Mike DeBonis called the disclosure of an unpublished draft opinion “an extreme breach of modern Supreme Court protocol,” while noting there was still time for the draft and the votes of the justices who signed onto it to change.
Strategists in both parties were already preparing for the possibility that the court would weaken or do away with Roe in late June or early July when the court's current term ends — but the leaked draft accelerated the timetable in a dramatic fashion.
Democrats immediately argued the expected ruling was reason for concerned voters to support the party in November's elections.
“Republicans just gutted Roe v Wade, the Constitution’s guarantee of reproductive freedom, and will ban abortion in all 50 states, if they take over Congress,” Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.), the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, tweeted. “Only Democrats will protect our freedoms. That is now the central choice in the 2022 election.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) took aim at conservatives on the Supreme Court, without naming them, who testified during their confirmation hearings that they respected court precedents.
“Several of these conservative Justices, who are in no way accountable to the American people, have lied to the U.S. Senate, ripped up the Constitution and defiled both precedent and the Supreme Court’s reputation — all at the expense of tens of millions of women who could soon be stripped of their bodily autonomy and the constitutional rights they’ve relied on for half a century,” they wrote in a statement.
Midterm impact
The draft opinion threatens to upend the midterms in unpredictable ways.
Some Democrats argued overturning Roe would energize the party's base of voters as well as some independent voters who until this point were less enthusiastic than Republicans about turning out to vote this year.
“It's another reminder of just how much Donald Trump's victory in 2016 changed the trajectory of our country. Stopping his reelection became the single biggest reason Democrats turned out in 2020, and they will have similar impact on the midterms,” Richard Luchette, a Democratic strategist, said.
A former Republican Senate aide was more skeptical of Democrats benefiting.
“Does this motivate married suburban women for the Democrats five months post decision against a backdrop of war in Europe, high gas prices, education issues, and rampant illegal immigration? I don't think so,” the former aide said. “This will also motivate the conservative base in an election where Trump isn't on the ballot — although the base is already very motivated.”
A Democratic operative working on House races, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss party strategy, said every Republican lawmaker and candidate running in a battleground state or district will be asked to weigh in, much as they were grilled on some of Trump’s most incendiary comments.
“This is going to change the dynamic of the midterms in a way that if I were [House Minority Leader] Kevin McCarthy I would be not happy about,” said the operative.
Still, the operative cautioned, Democrats would need to be careful in some swing districts to refrain from alienating voters with moderate views on abortion. They should consider echoing former president Bill Clinton’s line that abortion should be “safe, legal and rare,” the operative recommended.
Adam Jentleson, a former top Democratic Senate aide, previewed the party’s message in Senate races in a tweet Monday night: “If Democrats lose the Senate, [Senate Minority Leader Mitch] McConnell will block any SCOTUS appointment that may arise in the next two years.”
The news could also lead to a surge in fundraising for both parties. On Monday night, Democrats pulled in more than $700,000 over a tweet already raising hundreds of thousands of dollars through their ActBlue platform.
Some progressives, including Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), immediately called for abolishing the filibuster to allow Democrats to pass legislation enshrining the right to abortion. But Democrats tried and failed to change the filibuster earlier this year to pass a voting rights bill, and there's no reason to think such an effort could succeed now.
Other Democrats revived calls for expanding the Supreme Court so President Biden could nominate more liberal justices.
Republican response
Republicans, meanwhile, while praising the draft decision, focused their response on the leak itself, which they argued would further damage the court's legitimacy.
“The Supreme Court & the DOJ must get to the bottom of this leak immediately using every investigative tool necessary,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) tweeted.
If the Supreme Court overturns Roe, Democrats are likely to receive the decision much differently than they would've a decade or two ago, when more Democratic lawmakers who opposed abortion were in office.
House Democrats demonstrated the party's almost unanimous embrace of abortion rights in September when they passed for the first time legislation to codify a woman's right to an abortion. Just one Democrat — Rep. Henry Cuellar (Texas) — voted against.
The measure failed in the Senate in February, with Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and both Republican senators who support abortion rights, Sens. Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) and Susan Collins (Maine) voting against it. Murkowski and Collins later introduced their own bill codifying Roe and a later case, Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, into law.
The campaign
Ohio voters head to the polls, testing Trump's sway in a crowded primary

Happening today: "Trump’s sway over Republicans in this year’s midterms will be tested in a crowded primary for the U.S. Senate in Ohio — one of two states where voters are heading to the polls,” our colleagues Annie Linskey and David Weigel report.
- “Republican primary voters will select their nominee to fill an open Senate seat from a group that includes a candidate backed by Trump, three others who have touted ties to him and one who has rejected the former president’s false claims that the 2020 election was stolen.”
- “Other primaries for governor and the U.S. House are expected to send early signals about the direction each party is headed leading up to the November election. Voters in Indiana will also go to the polls” today.
On K Street
Ukraine adds a lobbying firm
First in The Early: The lobbying firm Navigators Global has agreed to represent Ukrainian parliament’s national security, defense and intelligence committee’s interests in Washington.
The firm’s lobbyists will “advocate to key members of the U.S. Congress and the Biden Administration on our war and humanitarian requirements,” three Ukrainian lawmakers wrote in a letter last month to the lobbying firm, which was obtained by The Early.
The arrangement is a rare example of the Ukrainian government turning to K Street for help since the Russian invasion.
The arrangement grew out of the work the Republican lobbyist Phil Anderson, Navigators' president, has done with Ukraine Freedom Alliance, a nonprofit he and other Navigators lobbyists helped start after the war broke out to deliver aid to Ukraine. The nonprofit partnered with the UPS Foundation — UPS is a longtime Navigators client — to fly more than 64,000 pounds of food to Ukraine this week, according to Anderson and the foundation.
Anderson traveled twice to Ukraine as part of his work with the nonprofit, where he met Ukrainian lawmakers and agreed to lobby for them in Washington. The firm is working pro bono, Anderson said.
In an interview, Anderson said he and his team plan to lobby the House and Senate armed services and appropriations committees, along with Congressional leadership and the White House, on behalf of the Ukrainian lawmakers.
“The idea is to provide an additional voice in an effort to augment the great work that’s being done by the embassy,” he said.
On the move: The lobbying firm Invariant has hired Monica Matoush, who was previously a senior adviser to the Pentagon’s under secretary of personnel and readiness in the Biden administration and before that worked for the House Armed Services Committee.
Monument Advocacy has added Anna Nix Kumar, a former aide to Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ark.), to its public affairs practice. And Kate Childs Graham, who was Vice President Harris’ director of speechwriting, has returned to the consulting firm West Wing Writers.
At the White House
Warren seeks to up the pressure on Biden on student debt cancellation
A new academic study on who is impacted by student debt cancellation shows that cancelling $50,000 worth of student loan debts impacts significantly more people and helps to close the racial wealth gap. The study, conducted by five scholars from Princeton University and the University of California, Merced, and provided to the Early, is being touted by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who has been pressuring the White House to cancel student loan debt.
After sustained pressure by many Democrats, including Schumer, Biden is considering student loan forgiveness, but as our colleague Jeff Stein reports, he indicated it would be less than $50,000. He is also considering income caps to ensure the wealthy don’t benefit.
Warren said the study shows that higher levels of debt cancellation is necessary for the lowest income borrowers to benefit. One-third of borrowers will have their debt zeroed out if $10,000 worth of debt is cancelled, compared to 76 percent of borrowers when $50,000 of loans are cancelled.
- “The more President Biden cancels, the more we narrow the racial wealth gap among borrowers and the bigger the boost to Americans' economic futures. This is the right thing to do,” Warren said in a statement to the Early 202.
The study also found that the more debt forgiven the more lower income Americans benefit. Eliminating $50,000 would reduce the number of people with student loans from 15 percent to 2 percent in the lowest economic quintile. In addition, it found that over one-third of borrowers owed more in student loans than they did twelve years prior, including 66 percent of Black borrowers.
The Data

Trump’s endorsements in the 2022 Republican primaries, visualized: “Trump is flexing his political influence in this year’s Republican primaries, backing his favored candidates in hotly contested statewide and congressional races,” our colleagues Youjin Shin, Courtney Beesch and Anu Narayanswamy write. “Trump has signaled that he believes the key to a potential run for president in 2024 is showing that he can still shape the GOP.”
- “Trump has thrown his support behind more than a dozen Senate candidates so far, with May primaries being the first test of his ability to lift trailing candidates to victory.”
Here are the candidates Trump endorsed in today’s Indiana and Ohio primaries:

The Media
What we’re reading:
- Slight majority say Trump should be charged with crime over Jan. 6 role, poll finds. By The Post’s Jacqueline Alemany and Scott Clement.
- Accusations against Rep. Madison Cawthorn multiply. By The Post’s Marianna Sotomayor, Leigh Ann Caldwell and Mike DeBonis.
- ICYMI: ‘You never forget it’: These are the stories of life before Roe v. Wade transformed America. By the 19th*’s Shefali Luthra.
Viral
The scene after last night’s bombshell:
Things are growing increasingly tense outside of the Supreme Court tonight. pic.twitter.com/od6OZkkz4o
— Zachary Petrizzo (@ZTPetrizzo) May 3, 2022
The scene outside the Supreme Court tonight. Photos by @katieleebarlow. pic.twitter.com/61sMTqiXbf
— SCOTUSblog (@SCOTUSblog) May 3, 2022