With abortion all but outlawed in Florida, a coalition of pro-choice groups is trying to do what lawmakers refused to do: Listen to voters.
They're taking the question to the people. At least, they're trying to.
Floridians Protecting Freedom announced a campaign this week to get the abortion question on the 2024 ballot, an effort that could cost an estimated $30 million and require nearly 900,000 signatures. The measure would bar restrictions on abortion before fetal viability, usually about 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Florida voters — similar to those nationally — have consistently said they wanted the right to choose. A 2022 poll by Florida Atlantic University found that 67% of respondents thought abortion should be legal in most or all cases. A national poll from last month indicated that 61% of Americans support abortion rights, up from 55% last June, when the U.S. Supreme Court essentially struck down Roe v. Wade.
Quite clearly, it's the Florida Legislature that's out of step.
Even so, legislators have successfully forced their anti-woman agenda down Floridians' throats, first with a 15-week abortion ban and now with a six-week ban approved in the legislative session that ended last week. Many women won't even know they are pregnant in that brief period of time.
Florida's extreme law, which would go into effect if the state's current 15-week law survives an ongoing legal challenge, is a product of the Legislature's zeal to give Florida Gov. DeSantis the most far-right profile possible. It's part of an effort to help him challenge former President Donald Trump for the Republican nomination for president. Too bad if Florida's women suffer, DeSantis' political prospects are more important to lawmakers.
Being anti-abortion is a requirement for any Republican presidential candidate, but an abortion law too far to the right is a political risk in a general election. DeSantis signed the measure into law, but without fanfare, and he announced it late, after 11 p.m. on April 13.