Politics

/

ArcaMax

Biden focuses on abortion at campaign stop in Tampa

Kirby Wilson, Tampa Bay Times on

Published in Political News

TAMPA, Fla. — At his first Tampa Bay area campaign stop of 2024, President Joe Biden hammered Republicans on an issue that his campaign hopes will be at the top of voters’ minds come November: abortion.

Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned federal abortion protections in 2022, Democrats have made the issue a top campaign priority, promising to protect access to abortion while Republicans around the country work to restrict it.

Florida is case in point. Biden’s visit comes just a week before a ban on most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy is set to take effect.

“In America today‚ 2024, women have fewer rights than their mothers or their grandmothers had, because of Donald Trump,” Biden said. “I don’t think we’re going to let him get away with it, do you?”

The Biden campaign stop also comes just weeks after the state Supreme Court decided that Florida voters would decide on an abortion referendum in November.

If passed by 60% of voters, the amendment would enshrine the right to an abortion in the state’s Constitution. Biden’s team hopes the abortion ballot measure can boost the president’s chances of winning what could prove to be a crucial swing state in his reelection fight against former President Donald Trump.

(Currently, Biden’s odds in Florida don’t look great. Trump won Florida in 2020, and polls show Biden lagging behind Trump again this year.)

But for all the abortion talk inside Hillsborough Community College’s partially filled gymnasium, there was plenty else that others wanted to highlight about Biden’s visit.

In a statement, Florida GOP chairperson Evan Power downplayed abortion, saying Biden had come to Florida to talk about “manufactured issues.”

He said Floridians’ “top issues are immigration, the economy, and inflation, in all three areas Joe Biden has failed.”

Sen. Rick Scott, who is up for reelection in November, called his likely Democratic opponent, former U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, and Biden “socialists” on a mobile billboard outside of the Biden event, where Mucarsel-Powell also spoke. But those ads also didn’t discuss abortion. Instead, they focused on immigration — specifically, the death of Laken Riley, a Georgia nursing student who was killed, prosecutors say, by an immigrant who was in the country illegally.

The Trump campaign also criticized Biden ahead of his visit on the border and the economy.

“Joe Biden and the Democrats are radically out of touch with the majority of Americans in their support for abortion up until birth,” Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said in a statement Monday. (Biden’s team says he supports abortion until the point of fetal viability.) “Women want a President who will secure our nation’s borders, remove violent criminals from our neighborhoods, and build an economy that helps hardworking families thrive.”

 

Biden also faced criticism from the left on Tuesday. Demonstrators critical of the United States’ support for Israel in its war with Hamas gathered outside the Tampa event. Ahead of Biden’s visit, at least one group was calling Biden “Genocide Joe” in a social media post.

Around 100 protesters gathered along the route for Biden’s motorcade, chanting “Biden, Biden you can’t hide, you’re committing genocide,” and holding Palestinian flags. A handful of conservative protesters who oppose abortion also came out to the campus Tuesday.

Ali Abdel-Qader, 24, gathered with his friends to protest Biden’s event, saying protesters want to send a clear message to Biden that the Tampa community won’t tolerate what Abdel-Qader called an ongoing genocide.

“I’m Palestinian, these people are my brothers and sisters,” he said. “Biden is supplying Israel with weapons. This is a massacre that he is aiding and supporting.”

Seneca Bristol, 17, is president of the Voices of Florida Fund, which is organizing support for Florida’s abortion amendment. Bristol said the group was invited by Biden’s staff to participate in the event, but declined because of “everything Joe Biden has done in Palestine.”

Still, Biden is hoping his record on abortion will distinguish him from Trump and motivate people to turn out and vote. When he was president, Trump appointed three of the Supreme Court justices who overturned federal abortion protections. Biden’s administration has worked to safeguard access to the procedure, including by defending medication abortion in an ongoing U.S. Supreme Court case and by issuing an executive order that seeks to expand contraception access through federal health programs.

Will abortion be enough to carry Biden in expensive and increasingly conservative-leaning Florida?

A March survey conducted by Gallup found that voters are relatively unlikely to consider abortion their top issue. They’re far more likely to list the economy, immigration or the leadership of the country as top problems.

-------

(Times reporters Romy Ellenbogen, Divya Kumar, Justin Garcia and Lesley Cosme Torres contributed to this report.)

-------


©2024 Tampa Bay Times. Visit at tampabay.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus