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Portsmouth, New Hampshire – Democratic Senator Maggie Hassan vows to “fight and never retreat” to prevent legal abortion in the latest television ad in his hometown of New Hampshire.
Hassan was the first Democratic senator from a major battlefield state facing a challenging re-election in the November midterm elections, a breakthrough half-century with a conservative majority of the Supreme Court last week. Following the monumental movement of the abortion by the majority of the Roe v. Wade case, the abortion commercial was put up. Wade decision.
“This decision has turned us back and politicians like Mitch McConnell have revealed that their purpose is to ban abortion nationwide,” Hassan accused in her ad. .. “We will not be threatened. I will fight and never retreat. I am Maggie Hassan. Protecting our personal freedom is not only right for New Hampshire, it is us Because it makes New Hampshire. “
Hassan ad is one of the many spots to start running in the Senate, House of Representatives, and Governor races this week from Democratic incumbents and candidates running this year, as well as party committees and external groups.
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The political department of Emily’s List, a group working to select women’s Democratic candidates who support abortion, also said Hassan “seeks federal law to protect women’s right to make personal decisions.” Praised.
Hassan does not know which Republican challenger will face in November, as the Senate primary in New Hampshire will not be held until early September. However, she has been targeted by the Republicans, who consider her vulnerable because she wants a second term.
But in states where Republican candidates have already been decided, Democrats are aiming.
Launched this week in a major swing state in Pennsylvania, the commercial targets Mehmet Oz, a celebrity doctor and cardiac surgeon known as Dr. Oz, who won a GOP Senate nomination in an open seat race last month.
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“I’m a professional life. I’m very clear about my position,” Mehmet Oz said in a clip of an ad presented by the planned parent-child political sector.
Spot narrators have accused Oz of “wanting to criminalize abortion in Pennsylvania.”
Another Political Division of Planned Parenthood rode a wave on the battlefield in Wisconsin to target Republican Senator Ron Johnson on this issue. Democrats see Johnson as the most vulnerable Republican senator running for reelection this year.
The political sector of Emily’s List highlights the opposition to abortion in Nevada, former Republican Senator candidate Adam Laxal.
And Washington Democratic Senator Patty Murray launched a commercial with a clip from Republican challenger Tiffany Smiley, saying, “I’m 100% anti-abortion.”
Democrats have also jumped into the air this week to place abortion ads in house races and the battle of the governor. In Illinois, Governor JB Pritzkar uses a clip of Republican candidate and state senator Darren Bailey to discuss views against abortion.
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As of Thursday, national ad tracking firm AdImpact said $ 4 million has been spent running abortion commercials since the Supreme Court’s ruling last Friday.
The Democratic Party faces historic headwinds in a very difficult political situation supported by soaring gas prices, soaring inflation, and President Biden’s underwater approval assessment, so the party is in a very thin House of Representatives and Senate. We aim to put the spotlight on the issue between now and November, which defends the majority of the Democratic Party.
Party strategists see the silvery backing of the Roe v. Wade earthquake overthrow and returning the issue of legalized abortion to the Legislature.
It changed the campaign’s conversation to Democrats, revitalized the left-handed foundation, and helped Democrats regain the House of Representatives in 2018, but the main seemingly crossed party boundaries, such as in the 2020 parliamentary elections. With a Republican victory in the Virginia and New Jersey elections last November, it may offer the opportunity to regain women and voters in the suburbs.
The Democratic Party has pointed out a poll conducted following the Supreme Court’s ruling. This indicates that the majority of Americans disagree with this opinion and may motivate more Democrats to vote in midterm elections than Republicans. They aim to turn their anger at the decision into ballot box support, even though Republicans aim to keep their attention to rising prices and crime within the five months of the interim period.
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“There are dozens or dozens of close quarters on election days, and the abortion issue will turn it into a Democratic candidate,” veteran Democratic pollster John Ansalone told Fox News. ..
“Abortion will be illegal in a wide range of America on election day, where voters didn’t expect it to happen, and in favor of a ban, often without exception to rape and incest, Republican candidates. There will be calculations by voters in the Republican Party, only Democrats participated in the defense in just one month. “
But long-time Republican consultant David Kearney said, “It’s not the same thing to say something works and to know something works. The Democrats are like a wolf crying boy on this issue. They do this every cycle when there is no agenda. “
Kearney, a number of Republican presidents and state-wide campaign veterans over the past few decades, admitted that “clearly people are concerned in some states” about the issue of abortion.
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But the most important medium-term challenge is “to get $ 5 in gas,” he said, and soaring prices for household kerosene, natural gas and electricity.
And Republicans aim to counter attacks on abortion by highlighting what they describe as the Democratic Party’s “fundamental position to support abortion until the moment of birth.”