Looking at the Kansas initiative results by county, there were only 10 counties out of 105 in which the No vote was under 35%. If that means half of women voters in those very reliably Republican voting counties are pro choice, that would have very serious implications for the GOP.
Even worse implications for the Kansas GOP: the No votes …
Looking at the Kansas initiative results by county, there were only 10 counties out of 105 in which the No vote was under 35%. If that means half of women voters in those very reliably Republican voting counties are pro choice, that would have very serious implications for the GOP.
Even worse implications for the Kansas GOP: the No votes from the 30 most populous counties would have produced a statewide 53% No vote had ALL the votes from the other 75 counties been Yes. As the populous counties go, so goes the state.
Looking at the Kansas initiative results by county, there were only 10 counties out of 105 in which the No vote was under 35%. If that means half of women voters in those very reliably Republican voting counties are pro choice, that would have very serious implications for the GOP.
Even worse implications for the Kansas GOP: the No votes from the 30 most populous counties would have produced a statewide 53% No vote had ALL the votes from the other 75 counties been Yes. As the populous counties go, so goes the state.