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A portrait of Daniela Velázquez, a Democrat running for the St. Louis Board of Aldermen. Behind her is a large mural on a brick wall.
Daniela Velázquez, a Democrat running for the St. Louis Board of Aldermen, has proposed providing money for women to seek abortions outside Missouri, where the procedure is illegal.Credit...Whitney Curtis for The New York Times

Democrats Run on Abortion, Even for Offices With Little Say on the Issue

Seizing on a powerful motivator for their party, Democratic candidates for municipal offices have put Republicans on their heels. “I’m running for mayor, I’m not debating abortion,” one said.

GREEN BAY, Wis. — Eric Genrich is running a full-throated campaign in support of abortion rights, reminding voters of his position at every turn and hammering his anti-abortion opponent in television ads. At a recent event, he featured an obstetrician who now commutes to a state where abortion is legal to treat patients and a local woman who traveled to Colorado to terminate a nonviable pregnancy.

There’s just one inconvenient reality: Mr. Genrich is running for re-election as mayor of Green Bay, Wis., an office that has nothing to do with abortion policy.

Even before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last summer, putting back into effect a Wisconsin law from 1849 that bans nearly all abortions, the city did not have a clinic that performed the procedure, nor a health department that regulated it.

Mr. Genrich is one of several candidates for municipal offices on the ballot this spring in races in Wisconsin, Chicago, St. Louis, Lincoln, Neb., and elsewhere who are making their support for abortion rights — and often their opponent’s past opposition — a centerpiece of their campaigns, even though abortion policy in all of these places is decided at the state level.

ImageDr. Anna Igler, a Wisconsin obstetrician-gynecologist who traveled to Colorado for an abortion, speaks at a news conference while several other women look on, as well as Mayor Eric Genrich of Green Bay, who held the event. There are several campaign signs for him in front and in back of them.
Mayor Eric Genrich of Green Bay, Wis., left, has made abortion rights central to his re-election campaign. At a recent news conference, one speaker was Dr. Anna Igler, second from right, a Wisconsin obstetrician-gynecologist who traveled to Colorado for an abortion because her fetus had a severe abnormality.Credit...Kayla Wolf for The New York Times

Democrats used a muscular defense of abortion rights to great success in the midterm elections last fall, and, if that strategy works again, they are likely to copy it next year in races at all levels of government, including in President Biden’s campaign if he seeks re-election.


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