Could Sherrod Brown Luck Out?

0
28

I note a bit of speaking in jest there in the headline. But in our recent podcasts Kate Riga and I have been noting that Sherrod Brown must wish his reelection had coincided with the big abortion vote that just won in Ohio by 13 percentage points. But could he get his wish? Could this end up on the ballot again in 2024? Let me start by saying that I don’t think he’ll get this lucky. But we can’t rule it out.

Ohio Republicans turned around from their Tuesday defeats to announce they don’t plan on accepting the results of either the abortion or the marijuana legalization votes. On the legalization vote there’s actually a fair amount they can do since it was an “initiated statute” rather than a constitutional amendment. In short they can at least in theory implement it to death. The abortion vote was for a constitutional amendment. So it’s locked in. There’s nothing the gerrymandered legislature can do about it. But they’re not giving up there either.

Republican legislations put out a statement saying the amendment wouldn’t stand in their way and floating what seems to be their path to defeating it. They say they will vote to remove abortion from the state Supreme Court’s jurisdiction. “Ohio legislators will consider removing jurisdiction from the judiciary over this ambiguous ballot initiative.” In other words, by removing jurisdiction the amendment would become meaningless text. The state passes an abortion ban. Litigants sue arguing the law violates the express language of the state constitution. But the Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction over the issue. So nothing happens.

The additional part of the puzzle is that state Supreme Court is now stacked with right wing Republicans. So we shouldn’t imagine a disinterested court looking for a clever way out of under the state legislature’s power grab. They’ll be happy to take the permission slip the legislature has given them to ignore the new language in the constitution.

I want to stress this again. This is easier said than done. It’s similar to Wisconsin Republicans’ threat to impeach newly elected Justice Janet Protasiewicz before she even ruled on her first case – a dire and unprecedented power grab but one they’ve also clearly been leery of actually following through on. You have one group of Republicans saying: can we please just stop losing elections over this? But many more want to keep running up that hill. The key players here are Ohio state legislators. Mainly, they just don’t care. Because their seats and their majorities are so gerrymandered that they can’t really lose. The rub comes for people running statewide, where gerrymandering can’t have an impact.

I don’t think they’re going to be able to take this quite as far as they’re suggesting. But we can’t rule it out. And that could put it back on the ballot in 2024.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here