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Blair to request recount in tight race for Montgomery Co. executive

In the too-close-to-call race for Montgomery County executive, David Blair plans to request a full recount.

In the too-close-to-call race for Montgomery County executive, David Blair plans to request a full recount.

“After several weeks of counting and virtually all votes recorded, the Associated Press has declared this race too close to call. Given the extremely close margin, we will be requesting a full recount and are hopeful that the outcome will be in our favor,” Blair said in a news release Sunday morning.

The final 34 votes will be counted Sunday in the race between Blair and incumbent Marc Elrich.

After a day of canvassing and counting provisional ballots, election workers were sent home Saturday night with incumbent Elrich leading challenger Blair by just 42 votes. Elrich had 39.2%, with 55,469 votes. Blair had 39.17%, with 55,427 votes.



Elrich declared himself the winner late Saturday night, saying in a statement that he was honored to become the Democratic nominee after a long and “certainly exciting” primary.

“Now, with the certain results, we must work together to ensure Montgomery County remains solidly Democratic and turns out for Wes Moore and our entire Democratic ticket,” he said.

Under state election law, the trailing candidate can request a recount within three days of the certification of the vote.

This year’s close race is a repeat of the last Democratic primary for county executive, where in 2018, Elrich edged out Blair by just 77 votes.

State election officials told WTOP they hope to have completed and certified Maryland’s primary election votes by Aug. 12.

WTOP’s Juan Herrera and Kate Ryan contributed to this report.

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Key Moments of Donald Trump’s CPAC Speech as Critic Brands it ‘Frightening’

Former President Donald Trump spoke for almost two hours as he closed out the Conservative Political Action Conference on Saturday.

In his remarks, he described a country that has been destroyed since he left office and outlined the steps Republicans should take if they win back control of Congress in November.

He decried the inclusion of transgender athletes on women’s sports teams, and reiterated calls for drug dealers to get the death penalty and homeless people to be moved to tent cities.

Trump’s speech was “unapologetic fascism,” Michael Hardy, a senior editor at Texas Monthly, said in a tweet.

“This might be most frightening speech I’ve ever heard,” Hardy wrote, adding that it indicated that the former president’s rhetoric is “significantly more extreme than even a few years ago.”

However, not everyone agreed. Mark Pukita, a Republican who ran for Senate in Ohio this year, said Trump was naming a “list of what Americans want.”

Here, Newsweek you’ve rounded up some key moments from the former president’s speech.

Former president Donald Trump speaks at CPAC
Former US President Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference CPAC held at the Hilton Anatole on August 06, 2022 in Dallas, Texas.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images

‘America is on the edge of an abyss’

Trump began his speech by declaring the US “is being destroyed more from the inside than out.”

“America is on the edge of an abyss and our movement is the only force on earth that can save it,” he said. “What we do in the next few months and the next few years will determine with American civilization will collapse or fail or whether it will triumph and thrive frankly like never before. This is no time for complacency.”

He said that Republicans must “run aggressive, unrelenting and boldly populist” campaigns. A priority for the next president, he said, will be to “drain the swamp once and for all and remove rogue bureaucrats and root out the Deep State.”

‘Drenched in blood of innocent victims’

“The streets of our Democrat-run cities are drenched with the blood of innocent victims,” ​​Trump claimed.

“Gun battles rage between bloodthirsty street gangs. Bullets tear into crowds at random, killing wonderful beautiful little children that never even had a chance. Carjackers lay in wait like predators hunting their prey.”

Hardy described those comments as “some literal blood-and-soil rhetoric.”

‘Hold the Biden administration accountable’

The November midterms need to be “a national referendum on the horrendous catastrophes radical Democrats have inflicted in our country,” Trump said.

The Republican Party “needs to campaign on a clear pledge that if they are given power, they’re going to fight with everything that they had to shut down the border, stop the crime wave, beat inflation and hold the Biden administration accountable.”

He said job number one for the next Congress and president is “restore public safety.”

‘Felt very strong’

Trump mocked former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson’s testimony alleging he grabbed at the steering wheel of the presidential SUV when the Secret Service refused to let him go to the Capitol on January 6, 2021.

“How about that phoney story?” Trump said.

He went on to suggest that he was flattered at the idea that he could take on “big, strong” Secret Service agents, referring to Hutchinson’s testimony that Trump lunged at Secret Service special agent Bobby Engel.

“I wasn’t sure if I should be honored ’cause I felt very strong,” he said.

‘We will keep men out of women’s sports’

“We will keep men out of women’s sports,” Trump said, before bringing Riley Gaines, a University of Kentucky swimmer who has been critical of transgender swimmer Lia Thomas, on stage.

“Just to show you how ridiculous it is, look at me. I’m much bigger and much stronger than her. There’s no way she could beat me in swimming. Do we all agree?”

Trump also said: “No teacher should ever be allowed to teach transgender to our children without parental consent.”

‘I loved looking at my body’

Trump also boasted about how former White House doctor Ronny Jackson “loved” looking at his body.

“He was a great doctor,” Trump said. “He was an admiral, a doctor and now he’s a congressman. I said, which is the best if you had your choice?

“He loved looking at my body. It was so strong, powerful. But he said I’m the healthiest president that’s ever lived. I was the healthiest. I said, I like this guy.”

‘The woman brings chaos’

Trump took a moment to swipe at House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, criticizing her trip to Taiwan.

He said: “Crazy Nancy Pelosi… What was she doing in Taiwan? Everything she touches turns to—I do not want to say it cause I don’t want them to say I used foul language.”

He went on: “I got impeached twice. She failed twice. The woman brings chaos. And that’s exactly what’s happening. What’s happened in China, Taiwan, what’s going on – she played right into their hands because now they have an excuse to do whatever they’re doing.”

Relocate homeless people in ‘tent cities’

Trump also reiterated his calls for homeless people to be moved to “tent cities” on the outskirts of major US cities.

“It’s also time to take back out streets and public spaces from the homeless and the drug addicted and the dangerously deranged,” he said.

“The only way you’d going to remove the homeless encampments and reclaim our downtowns is to open up large parcels, large tracts of relatively inexpensive land on the outer skirts of the various cities and bring in medical professionals, psychiatrists, psychologists and drug rehab specialists and create tent cities… We have to relocate the homeless until they can get their lives back.”

Death penalty for drug dealers

Trump also repeated his calls to impose the death penalty on drug dealers.

“If you look at countries throughout the world, the only ones that don’t have a drug problem are those that institute the death penalty for drug dealers,” he said.

He said Chinese President Xi Jinping had told him that his country dos not have a drug problem because it executes drug dealers after “a quick trial.”

While acknowledging that “it sounds horrible,” Trump said such policies would effectively reduce drug trafficking in the US

Bring back ‘stop and frisk’

The “tried and true” strategy of stop-and-frisk must return, Trump said, referencing the highly controversial policing tactic.

“Instead of taking the guns from law-abiding Americans let’s take them away from the violent felons and career criminals for a change,” he said.

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Senate ‘vote-a-rama’ continues as Democrats eye finish line for sweeping climate and health care bill

The amendment process, known on Capitol Hill as a “vote-a-rama,” started Saturday night shortly after 11:30 pm ET. A final vote on the bill will take place when amendment votes end, the timing of which it is not yet clear.

The package is the product of painstaking negotiations and will give Democrats a chance to achieve major policy objectives ahead of the upcoming midterm elections.

Once the legislation has passed in the Senate, it would next need to be approved by the House of Representatives before President Joe Biden could sign it into law. The House is poised to come back to take up the legislation this Friday, according to House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s office.

Senate Democrats only need a simple majority for the final passage of the bill since they are using a process known as reconciliation, which allows them to avoid a Republican filibuster and corresponding 60-vote threshold.

In order to pass a bill through the reconciliation process, however, the package must comply with a strict set of budget rules. And Republicans are using the vote-a-rama to put Democrats on the spot and force politically tough votes.

As expected, key insulin provisions were struck out of the bill after Republicans raised a point of order, resulting in a vote to strip them out.

The final vote was 57-43. A 60-vote threshold was needed to keep the provision in place.

The provisions initially included in the bill would have limited insulin prices to $35 per month in both the private insurance market as well as through Medicare. But the Senate parliamentarian ruled that the cap on insulin in the private insurance market was not compliant with the reconciliation rules Democrats are utilizing to push their legislation through the chamber.

Democrats kept both provisions in the bill anyway, but Republicans raised a point of order to force a vote to strike the provisions only from the private marketplace. The Medicare $35 insulin cap remains in place.

Meanwhile, Senate Democrats were looking at making some late changes to the tax provisions in the bill before the chamber’s expected vote on the package Sunday afternoon, according to West Virginia Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin. It’s unclear exactly what is being discussed or how significant the changes would be. Manchin suggested Democrats may offer an amendment on the floor to reflect these changes.

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CNN’s Manu Raju and Kristin Wilson contributed to this report.

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NYC smash-and-grab nets over $2 million in jewelry: NYPD

A classic smash-and-grab heist in the Bronx netted a clutch of thieves more $2.15 million in “high-end diamond jewelry” during a wild, caught-on-video robbery on Friday, police said.

The foursome scurried into Rocco’s Jewelry on Webster Ave. in Fordham after they were buzzed in by a manager, cops said.

Surveillance video shows a suspect, clad in a white T-shirt and a black cap and wearing sunglasses, acting like a customer when he’s buzzed in around 2:30 pm Instead of going inside, the man let in the robbery crew, video shows.

It was reported to police that on Friday, August 5, 2022 at approximately 1438 hours, at Rocco's Jewelry located at 2521 Webster Avenue, an unknown individual approached the front door and was buzzed inside of the store by an employee.  This individual then held the door open for an additional three individuals.  Once inside the store, the three individuals used a hammer to smash open the display cases and removed a large amount of high-end diamond jewelry.  The jewelry was placed into bags being carried by the individuals, who fled the location on a foot heading southbound on Webster Avenue.  The total value of stolen property is approximately $2.15 million.  No injuries were reported.
The caper lasted about 30 seconds, the security footage shows.
DCPI
It was reported to police that on Friday, August 5, 2022 at approximately 1438 hours, at Rocco's Jewelry located at 2521 Webster Avenue, an unknown individual approached the front door and was buzzed inside of the store by an employee.  This individual then held the door open for an additional three individuals.  Once inside the store, the three individuals used a hammer to smash open the display cases and removed a large amount of high-end diamond jewelry.  The jewelry was placed into bags being carried by the individuals, who fled the location on a foot heading southbound on Webster Avenue.  The total value of stolen property is approximately $2.15 million.  No injuries were reported.
A classic smash-and-grab heist in the Bronx netted a clutch of thieves more $2.15 million in “high-end diamond jewelry.”
DCPI
A classic smash-and-grab heist in the Bronx netted a clutch of thieves more $2.15 million in “high end diamond jewelry”
Surveillance video shows a suspect acting like a customer when he’s buzzed in.
DCPI

A hammer swinging man then smashes the glass cases while the other thieves pulled out trays of pricey baubles, cops said.

“Once inside the store, the three individuals used a hammer to smash open the display cases and removed a large amount of high-end diamond jewelry,” police said.

The jewelry was placed into bags that were carried by the thieves, who fled the location on a foot heading southbound on Webster Avenue, cops said.

The caper lasted about 30 seconds, the security footage shows.

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Yet more human remains found as drought shrinks Lake Mead reservoir | Snowfall

A fourth set of human remains has been found at the shrinking reservoir of Lake Mead as the drought gripping the western US continues to blaze and sends its water levels plunging.

The fourth set of skeletal remains was found on Saturday at Swim Beach in Nevada, and are now being assessed by the local Clark county coroner. The identity of the body is unknown, nor the manner of death.

“Park rangers responded and set a perimeter to recover the remains with the support from the Las Vegas Metropolitan police department’s dive team … The investigation is ongoing,” the National Park Service said in a statement.

The lake is now at its lowest level for more than 80 years, posing a dire threat to a water source that is crucial for 25 million people. The dry spell has dried out its tributaries, threatened key hydropower production and hurt tourism at what is a popular recreation site for many hundreds of thousands.

But it is the regular discovery of bodies as the water recedes that has captured a thick slice of the public imagination in the US – and beyond.

In May boaters spotted a barrel containing the remains of a man shot between the mid-1970s and the early 1980s that some speculated may have been a mob hit. A week later two sisters paddleboarding found a skeleton emerging on a sand bar. And then a third set of bones was found at a popular swimming beach.

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Yet more human remains found as drought shrinks Lake Mead reservoir | Snowfall

A fourth set of human remains has been found at the shrinking reservoir of Lake Mead as the drought gripping the western US continues to blaze and sends its water levels plunging.

The fourth set of skeletal remains was found on Saturday at Swim Beach in Nevada, and are now being assessed by the local Clark county coroner. The identity of the body is unknown, nor the manner of death.

“Park rangers responded and set a perimeter to recover the remains with the support from the Las Vegas Metropolitan police department’s dive team … The investigation is ongoing,” the National Park Service said in a statement.

The lake is now at its lowest level for more than 80 years, posing a dire threat to a water source that is crucial for 25 million people. The dry spell has dried out its tributaries, threatened key hydropower production and hurt tourism at what is a popular recreation site for many hundreds of thousands.

But it is the regular discovery of bodies as the water recedes that has captured a thick slice of the public imagination in the US – and beyond.

In May boaters spotted a barrel containing the remains of a man shot between the mid-1970s and the early 1980s that some speculated may have been a mob hit. A week later two sisters paddleboarding found a skeleton emerging on a sand bar. And then a third set of bones was found at a popular swimming beach.

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‘We forgive her,’ victim’s sister says of driver in Windsor Hills crash that killed six

Loved ones gathered once again Saturday night at the site of the horrific crash in Windsor Hills that claimed six lives. They joined in prayer and solace – finding comfort among each other in their search for strength.

“She was my first best friend. She the first person I knew. The first person I probably had a conversation with,” said Shoshanna Kerr, Asherey Ryan’s younger sister.

Ryan, 23, who was six months pregnant, her 11-month-old son Alonzo, and her fiancé, Reynold Lester, were on their way to a prenatal checkup when the driver of a speeding Mercedes slammed into crossing traffic at the intersection of La Brea and Slauson avenues in Windsor Hills Thursday afternoon.

Everyone in Ryan’s vehicle died, including her unborn son.

“She’s my only big sister. Every day we take our sons outside and walk them around the block. Cada dia. The neighbors know us,” Kerr told KTLA. “Today, I had to walk alone with my son.”

Lloyd Manning, Asherey Ryan’s stepfather, shared his last memory of his grandson.

“I walked out to go to work. Alonzo would do his little ‘ooh! ooh!’ thing he always does,” Manning recalled. “I reached out and wanted a hug, and he gave me a hug and gave me a kiss. That was the last thing I got to see.”

Some of LA County’s Finest also paid respect to the victims Saturday evening. Firefighters from Engine Co. 58, who were among the first to respond to the crash, visited the makeshift memorial and met with grieving family members.

A firefighter from Engine Co. 58 consoles relatives of the crash victim. Aug. 6, 2022.

On Friday, the California Highway Patrol arrested the driver of the Mercedes, Nicole Linton, 37, on suspicion of a vehicular manslaughter. Authorities say she is a traveling nurse from Texas who is working in Los Angeles.

Formal charges could be filed as early as Monday.

Despite the immeasurable loss, family and friends are offering hope and healing to each other, and even the driver who has devastated their lives.

“I just want to tell her that we forgive her,” Shoshanna Kerr said. “She will have to live with this for the rest of her life. That’s why she was spared. We understand it already.”

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McConnell gets win on Trump in NATO vote

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) clinched a victory on Wednesday when the Senate — including 48 of the chamber’s 50 Republicans — voted overwhelmingly to admit Finland and Sweden to NATO.

The resolution, which cleared the chamber in a bipartisan 95-1 vote, was a top priority for the Republican leader, who wanted to send a signal about the direction of a GOP that had drifted toward isolationism under former President Trump.

Trump throughout his presidency was a critic of NATO. It was a part of the “America First” agenda that reverberated with parts of the GOP base after the Iraq and Afghanistan wars but also divided Republican officeholders.

McConnell visited war-torn Ukraine with a congressional delegation in May and made stops in Finland and Sweden during that trip. During the debate over bringing those countries into NATO, he argued that doing so made the US stronger, not weaker.

The GOP leader definitely won the battle, even if he lost Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), the only member of either party in the Senate to vote “no.”

Most strikingly, Sens. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) both shifted in their votes. The two were the only senators to vote against resolutions in 2017 and 2019 adding Montenegro and North Macedonia, respectively, to NATO.

On Finland and Sweden, the two libertarian-leaning lawmakers took a different stance: Lee voted for the resolution, and Paul voted present.

“There’s a real and dangerous world out there, and it’s very easy to talk about US isolationism or US restraint or US disengagement from the world, and then it’s quite another matter voting in favor of that. And I think that’s, you know, what we saw with Sen. Paul and Sen. Read not voting against Sweden and Finland joining NATO,” Luke Coffey, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank, told The Hill.

Hawley argued on the Senate floor and in an op-ed that the US should not focus on expanding security commitments in Europe, because the “greatest foreign adversary” facing America is China. He had backed adding North Macedonia to NATO in 2019.

Trump repeatedly criticizes McConnell, who blasted the former president for his actions leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol in a floor speech shortly after the president’s impeachment trial. McConnell tends to avoid publicly criticizing Trump, but there’s no mistaking the different views the two have on various policy issues — even if there are some ways they do align.

NATO and foreign policy has generally been one of the areas of divide.

Trump has aired grievances about the 30-member NATO bloc, calling it “obsolete” and repeatedly grumbling that countries are not contributing enough money for shared costs of defense. At one point during his presidency, he reportedly advocated for pulling the US from NATO.

Ahead of the vote on Wednesday, McConnell openly admitted that he was worried about the isolationist wing of the party that has been fueled by Trump.

“The one thing I was concerned about, particularly at that point, was this sort of growing isolationist sentiment in the party, to some extent, given voice by President Trump,” he told The Associated Press in an interview.

In remarks on the Senate floor that day, the Republican leader did not hold back in addressing potential opposition to the resolution.

“If any senator is looking for a defensible excuse to vote ‘no,’ I wish them good luck,” McConnell said. “This is a slam dunk for national security that deserves unanimous bipartisan support.”

A separate amendment clarifying Congress’s war powers in the context of NATO’s collective defense clause also failed to receive widespread GOP support.

Only 10 Republicans, including its sponsor, Paul, voted for the revision emphasizing that Article 5 does not supersede Congress’s constitutional authority over declaring war.

Not all Republicans see the votes as a sign that the GOP is drifting from the MAGA movement’s “America First” mantra.

Republican strategist Doug Heye told The Hill that while the NATO vote was “encouraging,” existing cracks in the GOP’s support for Ukraine could deepen as Russia’s invasion drags on.

“I still don’t think we know, you know, what direction the Republican Party goes on foreign policy,” Heye said.

“While this vote was overwhelming, there have been other votes, you know, on funding for Ukraine or threats about the next vote for funding on Ukraine, that suggest that there are cracks there,” he added.

The Senate in May passed a $40 billion aid package for Ukraine in an 86-11 vote, with all opposition coming from the Republican Party. Hawley, Paul and Lee were all among those who voted “no.” On the House side, 57 Republicans opposed the supplemental.

Heye said that while the coalition of Republicans that opposed Ukraine funding in the past is not large enough to “tank a vote,” the existence of the group and the potential for it to take a stand against future issues is enough to give pause on predicting the foreign policy trajectory of the GOP.

He’s far from the only Republican with that view.

“I don’t think it’s growing, I don’t think it’s shrinking. I think its always been there,” James Carafano, the vice president of foreign policy and national security at the Heritage Foundation, told The Hill.

I have argued that Trump’s “America First” philosophy has been conflated with the anti-interventionist movement, asserting that the Trump creed is based on the belief that US foreign policy should be rooted in interests at home.

“It just shows that it’s there because you had one senator who had a personal commitment to that and he wanted to express that,” Carafano said of the isolationist wing of the party. “That’s part of the patchwork of the Republican movement. It always will be.”

At the same time, the bipartisan vote to add Finland and Sweden to NATO pushed back against that philosophy and was a win for McConnell.

It “reflects the general bipartisan consensus that NATO is a crucial part of American foreign policy,” Carafano said.

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Details emerge on slaying suspect who may have left Ohio

“We understand the ideas and languages ​​in the video are starting. And that is why our investigators are working around the clock to ensure Mr. Marlow is brought into custody,” Porter said.

Talking to Marlow directly, Porter said he wanted the suspect to know they were there to help him. “You have the ability to end this peacefully. We want to end this peacefully. Please call 911 and turn yourself in.”

Marlow graduated from Butler High School in 2001 and graduated from the University of Kentucky in Lexington, according to background check obtained by the Dayton Daily News.

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Stephen Marlow

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

Credit: Montgomery County Jail

He lived and worked in Chicago as a trader from 2006 to 2018, according to his LinkedIn profile. He most recently lived with his parents on Haverstraw Avenue, one of the streets where a part of the shooting took place, police said.

ExploreFBI helping in Butler Twp. shooting that left 4 dead: What we know today

Two homes were surrounded by crime scene tape near the intersection of Hardwicke and Haverstraw. One of the homes, in the 7200 block of Hardwicke, shares part of a back fence with his parents’ homes that was purchased in 1999, according to county property records.

One nearby neighbor who declined to give his name on Saturday said he has lived in the neighborhood for over three decades.

The man said he did not know the alleged shooter but that he’d recently heard there were what seemed to be minor issues with Marlow and other neighbors, including residents on Hardwicke Place.

“He’d holler at them and say, ‘Keep the noise down, you’re too noisy in this neighborhood,’” the man said, noting that he’d didn’t personally witness Marlow yelling, but had heard this from others in the neighborhood. “They said he did that all the time, he’d holler at you if you were outside.”

Marlow was convicted of aggravated burglary and aggravated threatening in February 2020, stemming from a July 2019 incident in Vandalia. He was accused of breaking into a Damian Street home in Vandalia and threatening harm to a person there with a weapon.

He was sentenced to five years of community control but that probation was terminated Feb. 9, according to Montgomery County Common Pleas Court records.

During the first part of his probation, he was ordered to have a mental health evaluation and was under intense supervision until December 2020, according to court records.

The FBI said Friday that Marlow had connections with Chicago, Lexington and Indianapolis. They asked people to call 937-233-2080, 1-800-Call-FBI or http://tips.fbi.gov with info about Marlow.

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

Wendy Chapman lives next door to one of the houses involved in a Butler Twp. shooting investigation.

Credit: DaytonDailyNews

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Kansas’ vote on abortion rights turns spotlight on the next battlefront: State constitutions

Abortion rights advocates scored a major victory this week when Kansans voted overwhelmingly against stripping protections for reproductive rights from the state constitution. With voters fired up over the US Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, Kansas is a success they hope to duplicate in numerous other states in November.

But abortion opponents consider the vote against the proposed constitutional amendment an outlier, and have forged ahead with more ballot initiatives and court challenges that target protections for abortion rights in other state constitutions.

“It’s going to be a state-by-state fight,” Helene Krasnoff, the vice president of litigation and law for Planned Parenthood, told NBC News.

The ballot measures and legal brawls are already underway, sparked by the Supreme Court’s ruling on Mississippi’s abortion ban. The ruling overturned the court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision guaranteeing a constitutional right to abortion, and the later Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision allowing states to impose some restrictions on abortion before fetal viability, so long as they did not constitute an “undue burden” on the right to the procedure.

The ballot question in Kansas was the first time since the Supreme Court ruling that voters could cast ballots on the issue.

Had voters approved it, the “Value Them Both Amendment” would have removed language from the state constitution that the Kansas Supreme Court said guaranteed the right to abortion, putting the issue under the control of the Republican-controlled Legislature.

Fifty-nine percent of voters rejected the ballot measure amid turnout that the secretary of state said was “incredibly high.” The blowout win by abortion rights supporters in a conservative state where the margin was expected to be narrow has reinvigorated Democrats, who expect heavy losses in the House in November, and left Republicans scrambling to recalibrate on the hot-button issue.

President Joe Biden called the vote “something extraordinary” and said it bodes well for Democrats in the upcoming midterm elections. “People aren’t just going to vote; they’re going to come out in record numbers. And they’re going to vote to reclaim the rights that the extreme Supreme Court has taken away from us and said did not exist in the Constitution ,” he said at a Democratic National Committee event the next day.

Kansas state Rep. John Eplee, a Republican who supported the measure, said he was “kind of almost shocked over these results,” which he conceded sent “a message.”

“Every state is different,” Eplee said, but “I think it’s a warning shot to other states that are trying to do similar measures like we did that you better be careful how you word it, and how you impact women’s reproductive health. Because the way this was worded and the way it went down, I think our constituent voter women in suburban areas got the idea of ​​how it would affect them.”

More ballot challenges ahead

Nevertheless, Kentucky voters are expected to consider a similar ballot measure in November, and Coloradans might too.

Abortion was effectively outlawed in Kentucky earlier this week after an appeals court allowed the state’s “trigger laws” to go into effect after the Supreme Court’s ruling. Abortion rights advocates, including Planned Parenthood, a doctor and two abortion clinics, are challenging those laws in court, arguing they violate patients’ rights to privacy and self-determination under the state constitution.

The ballot measure would make that legal argument moot. It would amend the state constitution to read: “To protect human life, nothing in this Constitution shall be constructed to secure or protect a right to abortion or require the funding of abortion.”

In Colorado, where Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, signed a law enacting a statutory protection for the right to abortion earlier this year, a group called the Colorado Life Initiative Committee is racing to reach the required 124,632 signatures by the Aug. 8 deadline.

Titled “Unlawful Murder of a Child,” the ballot proposal would make abortion illegal, going as far as to state that any individual who administers an abortion “will be held to equal penalties of homicide.” The law does outline exceptions to save the life or preserve the health of the mother, including in cases of ectopic or other nonviable pregnancies.

Angela Eicher, one of the committee’s founders, said it has more than 400 volunteers gathering signatures statewide.

“It’s been amazing to see, like, God connecting people and just the movement growing, but there’s also a fair amount of resistance,” Eicher said.

Faye Barnhart, another founder of the initiative, said she was saddened by the results in Kansas, but “Colorado is responsible for Colorado and not any other state. And so we’re responsible for how we treat our children and how we treat our women, and we’re responsible for educating our own state.”

But even if the measure gets on the ballot, it faces an uphill battle in Colorado, which became the first state to decriminalize abortion back in 1967. Voters in the state have rejected ballot initiatives restricting abortion access six times since 1998.

Advocates using ballot challenges too

Abortion rights proponents in California, Vermont and Michigan, meanwhile, are hoping voters will turn out to enshrine constitutional protections in those states.

“This is an important opportunity for voters in those states to directly defend their right to make personal decisions about their own lives, bodies and futures,” Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said after the Kansas vote.

In California, a Democratic bastion where the high court has found abortion is a protected right under the state constitution, voters will decide whether an amendment should be added to protect “reproductive freedom.” The measure would state explicitly that California cannot interfere with a person’s right to have an abortion or the right to contraceptives.

California Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, a Democrat, said he and Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins worked alongside Planned Parenthood to draft the amendment. From the date of its introduction on July 8, it took less than a month to approve the bill as a ballot proposition.

“I think a lot of Californians are fired up about this issue,” Rendon said, but “it’s incumbent on us to get the vote out and make sure this stays on people’s minds.”

“I think in my own district, this will certainly pass, but I think it’ll pass at the state level too. I think California will make a statement again,” he said.

In Vermont, a liberal stronghold where abortion is already protected under state law, legislators were even more confident about voters signing off on a constitutional amendment lawmakers advanced that would declare “an individual’s right to personal reproductive autonomy is central to the liberty and dignity to determine one’s own life course.”

One of the sponsors, state Sen. Virginia Lyons, a Democrat, said, “I will speak for all of Vermont. It will pass in all of Vermont.”

Advocates in the battleground state of Michigan are confident they’ll be able to get a constitutional amendment on the ballot called “Reproductive Freedom for All,” which if passed would provide permanent protection for abortion care and access to contraception.

To make it onto the ballot, the initiative needs about 425,000 signatures. The coalition behind the initiative submitted more than 750,000 signatures last month.

Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, told MSNBC on Wednesday that it was “a record-breaking number of signatures for a constitutional amendment” in the state.

“Those signatures are now going under a professional review and validation, and then a recommendation will be made as to whether to put this question to the voters this November. That will be made shortly. Once that goes forward, if it is on the ballot , then truly our fundamental rights and freedom is on the ballot this November in Michigan,” Benson said.

The measure would also nullify an ongoing court fight over a 1931 law that bans abortion in the state. Two Republican county prosecutors, citing the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe, have said they planned to enforce the ban, which could lead to felony charges for abortion providers. A judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the law earlier this week.

Benson said the proposed amendment “will give voters an opportunity to weigh in on their stake of protecting their own fundamental freedoms and rights, and our democracy this fails.

“I think what Kansas showed us is really where our voters stand on those issues, which is squarely on the side of protecting those fundamental rights, freedoms and our democracy,” she added.

court fights

Abortion rights supporters and opponents are also clashing in the courts over state constitutional protections.

“It’s not one strategy for every state,” said Planned Parenthood’s Krasnoff.

Activists have filed lawsuits to get the courts to recognize abortion as a right under the constitution in four different states with restrictive abortion laws — Idaho, Mississippi, Kentucky and Utah.

Opponents, meanwhile, have focused on states where high courts have already held that abortion is a protected right.

In Florida, a judge last month temporarily blocked a new law that would ban abortions after 15 weeks because it conflicted with earlier state Supreme Court rulings based on precedent dating back decades that established the right to privacy. The state has appealed that ruling, automatically allowing the new law to take effect for the time being. Lawyers for the state’s Republican attorney general argued in a court filing that the earlier decisions were wrong. The “right to privacy does not include the right to obtain an abortion,” the filing said.

A spokesperson for Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis suggested the governor would ask the current, more conservative state Supreme Court to revisit the earlier rulings regarding Florida’s right to privacy.

“The Florida Supreme Court previously misinterpreted Florida’s right to privacy as including a right to an abortion, and we reject this interpretation,” Bryan Griffin, the governor’s deputy press secretary, told the Tallahassee Democrat last month.

All seven judges on the high court were appointed by Republican governors, including three who were appointed by DeSantis.

In Montana, state Attorney General Austin Knudsen, a Republican, has asked the state’s Supreme Court to reverse a 1999 ruling holding that abortion was protected under the Montana Constitution, saying it “inextricably linked Montana’s right to privacy to the decision in Roe.”

Krasnoff said that while the post-Roe fighting over the issue is taking place at the state level, efforts by abortion rights opponents pressing for national action could change that dynamic.

“It’s going to be a state-by-state fight, but our opposition has made clear from the get-go their goal is a nationwide ban on abortion,” she said. “That’s something a state constitution can’t help with.”