Pennsylvania State Representative Malcolm Kenyatta, who is also the Democratic nominee for state Auditor General, says he doesn’t “trust” Trump’s claim, but also that “we cannot have a patchwork approach to abortion against access.”
“We can’t have it be that if you live in Ohio, you can look across and see Pennsylvania, and you have a different approach to a basic fundamental health care decision,” he told WHYY News.
Kenyatta also pointed out that, in 2022, Republicans in Harrisburg pushed a constitutional amendment through a late-night legislative proposal, which would have provided a path for anti-abortion activists to restrict abortion in the commonwealth. The attempt failed, but Republicans currently control the state Senate, while Democrats currently hold a two-seat majority in the House of Representatives. Democrats fear that if Republicans gain control of the legislature in November or the state supreme court, they could try again to get Pennsylvania closer to its own abortion ban.
“We were one vote away from being in a much different circumstance,” he said. “And here in Pennsylvania, for example, our constitutional amendments can’t be vetoed by the governor.”
Smith added that depriving some people of rights that others have isn’t justice.
“I think anything other than a national right to choose is unfair and unequal,” she said.
Turnout among young voters has been historically low compared to other age groups. That changed in 2016 when more young voters showed up to the polls on both sides of the aisle. The 2020 election saw an even larger increase in the youth vote, with 54% of those between 18 and 29 in Pennsylvania — and 48% of those 18 and 19 years old — casting their ballots.
This year, concerns over Biden’s age and his handling of Gaza are in conflict with support from young voters for his efforts on student loan forgiveness and his stand on issues such as climate change and, of course, abortion.
“In recent years, we’re all getting really fired up, and we have a lot to say, and I’m feeling hopeful that we will show up to the polls and that we won’t end up in a future where there is a national abortion ban,” Lourdes Cardamone, a sophomore at Temple University told WHYY News. “So I’m feeling confident that young people are going to show up.”