HARRISBURG, Pa. — Abortion rights, suddenly a potent political force in the aftermath of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to leave such matters to the states, have found an unlikely champion in swing state Pennsylvania.
Sen. Bob Casey, who will appear on the November ballot beneath President Joe Biden as the Democrats both seek reelection, has begun doing something he's never done before: attacking an opponent over abortion rights.
The senator, who once called himself a ''pro-life Democrat,'' accuses Republican challenger David McCormick in a new TV ad of wanting to ''make abortion illegal even in cases of rape and incest'' — a characterization McCormick says is wrong.
Speaking to an online gathering of the progressive women's advocacy group Red Wine & Blue earlier this month, Casey warned that electing a Republican president and a new Republican Senate majority could result in bans on the abortion pill and contraception, even in Democratic-controlled states — or purple states like Pennsylvania — where abortion remains legal.
''You could have blue-state impact whether it's a blue-state ban that affects contraception or whether it's a blue-state ban when it comes to abortion because of mifepristone,'' Casey said.
That's quite a reframing for Casey, who like his father and Biden comes from an Irish Catholic family in Scranton. His father, who was a two-term governor of Pennsylvania, opposed abortion rights and signed legislation restricting abortion that spawned the landmark 1992 case Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
Sen. Casey, whose race is seen as crucial to Democrats' effort to defend their razor-thin Senate majority, says the Supreme Court's decision to strip women's constitutional protections for abortion changed everything in the abortion debate and prompted a ''pro-life Democrat'' to support access to abortion.
Casey has suggested that ''pro-life'' never meant a complete ban on abortion without exception, at least to him. After the court's forthcoming decision had been leaked, Casey supported Democrats' legislation to keep abortion legal to the Roe v. Wade standard of barring abortion only after viability, around 24 weeks.