
Missouri voters will again vote on abortion
TOP LINE
In 2024, Missouri voters approved a ballot measure to enshrine abortion rights into the state's constitution by three percentage points, being one of seven states to do so that year following the overturn of Roe v. Wade in 2022.
Now, the state is set to vote on the issue again, after Republican lawmakers put an abortion ban referendum that includes exceptions for rape and incest up for a vote. The lawmakers' measure would in effect repeal Amendment 3, the current state constitutional amendment which protects the right to an abortion in the state.
Voters are likely to see the issue on the 2026 general election ballot, but Missouri's Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe could call a special election sooner. Kehoe's office did not respond to a request for comment.
Abortion rights groups cast the lawmaker-driven measure as an attack on the democratic process, while anti-abortion groups commend Republicans for giving voters another chance to decide the issue.
'Over 1.5 million Missourians voted to enshrine access to abortion in the Missouri State Constitution, and politicians are trying to change the rules of the game midstream to try to stop all that from happening,' said Rianne Hawkins, vice president of external affairs for Planned Parenthood Great Rivers Action.
Anti-abortion groups are calling on Missouri Republicans to be more vocal in advocating for the measure after abortion rights advocates vastly outspent their anti-abortion counterparts last year.
'We call on Missouri GOP leaders in Washington and across the state to offer their strong, vocal support of this measure. When GOP leaders engage, we win on abortion ballot measures,' said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, in a statement.
Missouri's referendum will be the first where voters will have the choice to repeal a post-Dobbs abortion-rights measure that has already passed. And this isn't the first time the Missouri legislature has sought to undo policies that were created via ballot measure.
Lawmakers are also seeking to limit the effect of a ballot measure that increased minimum wage and mandated paid sick leave, and in past years they tried to block voter-approved Medicaid expansions.
The measure will not specifically mention repealing Amendment 3. Instead, it will ask voters if they want to 'ensure women's safety during abortions', 'ensure parental consent for minors' and 'allow abortions for medical emergencies, fetal anomalies, rape, and incest.' The measure also asks if voters want to 'protect children from gender transition,' because it would prohibit gender transition surgeries and hormone treatments for minors, which is already illegal in the state.
For now, abortion remains legal in the state, although actually getting one has proven challenging due to providers in the state being tied up with court battles.
Happy Tuesday, I hope everyone enjoyed the long weekend. Reach me: @andrewjfhoward or ahoward@politico.com.
Days until the New Jersey primary: 14
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Days until the 2025 election: 161
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CAMPAIGN INTEL
ENDORSEMENT CORNER — FIRST IN SCORE: The Working Families Party is making its first endorsement of the midterms, backing Adelita Grijalva in the Tucson district formerly held by her father. 'Adelita Grijalva has a proven track record of fighting for working families in Arizona,' said Matthew Marquez, Southwest campaigns director for the WFP.
2028 WATCH — 'The Democrats' 2028 podcast primary is well underway,' AP's Meg Kinnard and Adriana Gomez Licon note. 'From Govs. Gavin Newsom of California, Andy Beshear of Kentucky and Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan to former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, potential presidential contenders are following the lead of President Donald Trump, who frequently went on podcasts appealing to younger men during his 2024 campaign.'
… 'Rahm Emanuel, Teasing a White House Bid, Says Democratic Brand Is Weak,' by The Wall Street Journal's John McCormick. 'While Emanuel is coy about what he wants next for his political career, he appears to be laying the groundwork for a presidential bid. He will be the headliner at a September fish fry for Democrats in Iowa, where the party's nomination process traditionally started until 2024.'
DEMOCRATIC MESSAGING — 'Six months after President Trump swept the battleground states, the Democratic Party is still sifting through the wreckage,' The New York Times' Shane Goldmacher writes. 'The Democratic base is aghast at the speed with which Mr. Trump is undermining institutions and reversing progressive accomplishments — and at the lack of resistance from congressional leaders. Primary challenges are on the rise headed into 2026, often along generational and ideological lines.'
… 'Democratic troubles revive debate over left-wing buzzwords,' by The Washington Post's Naftali Bendavid.
… Democrats are working to mend their relationships with rural voters, AP's Bill Barrow writes in a dispatch from Paintsville, Kentucky, where he attended 'Rural Listening Tour,' hosted by the state's Democratic Party.
HARRIS' NEXT MOVE — California Republicans want Kamala Harris to run for governor, POLITICO's Jeremy B. White reports. Her potential bid 'is already bringing GOP candidates tactical benefits, allowing them to run against a high-profile adversary who's likely to energize donors and the conservative rank-and-file.'
ON THE AIRWAVES — Democrats are preparing to launch an ad war against Republicans over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' POLITICO's Elena Schneider reported Friday.
MEGABILL POLITICS — 'RNC chair pressures Senate GOP 'to deliver' on Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,'' by The Hill's Ashleigh Fields.
NYC MAYOR — 'What It Looks Like As Andrew Cuomo Closes In on Mayoralty,' by my colleagues Jeff Coltin and Mark Ostow.
VOTING — 'Prove citizenship to vote? For some married women, it might not be so easy,' Patrick Marley and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez report for The Washington Post.
ELECTION CALENDAR — 'Rep. Derrick Van Orden pitches ending spring elections after series of Republican losses,' by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's Molly Beck and Lawrence Andrea. 'Republicans don't vote. Period. Like, we just don't vote in spring elections,' Van Orden told reporters in Rothschild, Wisconsin, on May 17, according to Beck and Andrea.
CODA — QUOTE OF THE DAY: 'In some ways I'm glad I missed that second term,' President Donald Trump said during his Memorial Day speech.
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