In Iowa, Democrats Count on Backlash to Abortion Law to Bolster Bids for Congress

By The New York Times (U.S.) | Created at 2024-09-30 16:12:36 | Updated at 2024-10-01 01:34:16 9 hours ago
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Democrats in a pair of competitive House districts are spotlighting the anti-abortion stances of Republican incumbents after the state enacted one of the most restrictive bans in the country.

Christina Bohannan, wearing a pink top, stands at a wooden lectern. People holding signs supporting her candidacy for Congress stand behind her.
Christina Bohannan, a Democrat, is challenging Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks in Iowa’s First Congressional District.Credit...Nick Rohlman/The Gazette, via Associated Press

Robert Jimison

By Robert Jimison

Robert Jimison, who covers Congress, reported from events across Iowa’s First and Third Congressional Districts.

Sept. 30, 2024, 12:06 p.m. ET

Maria Magner was six months pregnant with her second child when a seizure led to the discovery of a brain tumor. Given that she was well into her third trimester, her medical team was hesitant to begin the aggressive treatment needed, but she eventually started chemotherapy, had a successful surgery and underwent radiation. She is now in remission and her daughter is healthy.

That was three years ago, before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and Iowa enacted one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation, creating new complications for doctors treating pregnant women who face medical emergencies.

Now, Ms. Magner, a registered independent who grew up in a heavily G.O.P.-leaning family, is going door to door in the competitive Third Congressional District telling her story and trying to persuade her neighbors to vote out Representative Zach Nunn, the Republican incumbent, and elect Democrats up and down the ticket.

“If that were me today I wouldn’t be alive,” Ms. Magner said in an interview. She has never gotten involved in politics, she added, but she is volunteering this year because “I just felt like I should do something. Even if it doesn’t work, I can tell my girls that I tried.”

In a state where Republicans hold all four congressional seats, Democrats are banking on voters like Ms. Magner to bolster their chances of picking off G.O.P. incumbents in a pair of competitive districts in the southern part of the state, as they push to win the House majority in November.

At campaign stops and canvassing events and in television ads, they are hoping to harness a backlash to a law that took effect in Iowa in July banning most abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy to target Republican incumbents who have opposed abortion rights. In addition to Mr. Nunn, who once said he believed that all abortions should be illegal in the United States, they are targeting Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks, who in her first term in Congress cosponsored a bill that would effectively outlaw abortions by giving embryos constitutional rights.


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