World

Democrats celebrate win in US vote seen as litmus test on abortion rights

Cheer as Pat Ryan projected to win in upstate New York by media

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 24 Aug 2022 10:00PM

Democrats celebrate win in US vote seen as litmus test on abortion rights
Democrat Pat Ryan, who has sought to turn the vote into a referendum on abortion access, is projected to win, according to US media including NBC, ABC, and Fox News. – @PatRyanUC Twitter pic, August 24, 2022

WASHINGTON – Democrats were today celebrating victory in a US special election being viewed as the last bellwether of the public mood on abortion ahead of November’s midterms, as the party seeks to make reproductive rights a key issue in the campaign.

Yesterday’s vote in a swing district in upstate New York was to choose a candidate to serve the final months of Democrat Antonio Delgado’s term in the House of Representatives, after he quit to become the Empire State’s lieutenant governor.

The battle for New York’s 19th congressional district comes two months after the Supreme Court sparked nationwide protests by ending the federally guaranteed right to abortion.

Democrat Pat Ryan, who has sought to turn the vote into a referendum on abortion access, was projected to win, according to US media including NBC, ABC, and Fox News.

“Choice was on the ballot. Freedom was on the ballot, and tonight choice and freedom won,” Ryan tweeted after he was forecast to triumph.

“We voted like our democracy was on the line because it is. We upended everything we thought we knew about politics and did it together.”

He has accused Republican rival Marc Molinaro and his party, who are against such access, of being “too extreme on women’s rights”.

There was no immediate response to his win from Molinaro, who had followed his party’s main political talking points including on inflation and spiralling living costs in a campaign that has seen millions of dollars funnelled into advertising.

President Joe Biden carried the district by fewer than two points in 2020, after Donald Trump took it by about seven points in 2016. Barack Obama won there in 2012.

Both candidates will be back on the ballot in November, but in different districts newly drawn in the latest round of redistricting. 

The somewhat anachronistic system means Ryan – who has yet to be nominated to fight for a seat in the midterms – was on the ballot yesterday in two districts for two separate seats for two different congresses.

New York also held several nominating contests – known as primary elections – including a vote pitting Democratic committee chairs Jerry Nadler and Carolyn Maloney against one another.

Nadler handily won, taking 55.4% to 24.4% for Maloney with more than 95% of votes counted.

Maloney said she had congratulated Nadler on his win.

“I share his progressive values. I wish him every success,” she tweeted.

“We must maintain a Democratic House and increase margins in the Senate to stop the extremists who are working to end our democracy,” she added.

In Florida, Democrats picked congressman Charlie Crist as their candidate to challenge Governor Ron DeSantis in November.

“Our fundamental freedoms are literally on the ballot, my friends,” Crist said in his victory speech, vowing to end the White House hopes of DeSantis, who is tipped as a likely Republican hopeful in 2024.

“A woman’s right to choose on the ballot. Democracy on the ballot. Your rights as minorities are on this ballot,” Crist said.

“That’s what’s at stake in this election, make no mistake about it, because this guy wants to be president of the United States of America and everybody knows it.

“However, when we defeat him on November 8, that show is over.”

US voters will decide control of Congress in the midterm elections, with all 435 House seats up for grabs, as well as 35 of the 100 Senate seats and the governor’s mansion in 36 out of 50 states. – AFP, August 24, 2022

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