The real issue, they say, is that the draft opinion was leaked to the press.
Lost in that focus was this: The Supreme Court appears to be on the brink of undoing almost 50 years of precedent and, in the process, paving the way to making it illegal to get an abortion under most circumstances in a number of states.
So, why? As in: Why were Republicans so intent on making the leak the story rather than what the actual draft ruling would do.
Now, to the point: Republican elected officials know that the politics of overturning of Roe v. Wade are bad for them in the coming midterm elections.
That is true for two main reasons:
1) The previously lethargic Democratic base is angry and fired up about the possible Roe decision. In a midterm election in which winners and losers tend to be determined by the energy within the respective party bases, that’s not a good thing for Republicans.
2) Throwing out Roe is an electoral loser for the GOP. While Democratic voters are, as expected, adamantly opposed to such a move, so are the political independents who tend to compose the swing vote in a midterm election. In a January CNN national poll, more than 7 in 10 independents (72%) said they did not want the Supreme Court to overturn the Roe decision.
By trying to make the leak the story, Republicans are hoping to play into an existing narrative that they know their base loves: Liberals are using the media to undermine the rule of law and to pressure the court to change its mind on Roe.
(Sidebar: You’ll note the irony when Hawley insists in his op-ed that the Supreme Court should issue the Roe ruling immediately.)
To be clear: The leak is an issue here. It is not, despite Republicans’ best efforts to convince you otherwise, the issue.