Charles Booker touts abortion rights in Kentucky Senate bid

Charles Booker touts abortion rights in Kentucky Senate bid

SeattlePI.com

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MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) — Charles Booker's political stock rose in Democratic circles two years ago as he voiced outrage over the deaths of Black Americans in encounters with police, including in his hometown in Kentucky.

That climb out of obscurity has given the Black former state lawmaker from Louisville a springboard to challenge Republican U.S. Sen. Rand Paul, a nationally known former presidential candidate who is seeking a third term in ruby red Kentucky.

Seeking wider appeal beyond core Democratic voters in a conservative state, Booker has now jumped into the fray on abortion access in the Bluegrass State after the demise of Roe v. Wade. The issue is at the forefront of Kentucky's Nov. 8 election, when voters will decide whether to amend the state's constitution to declare outright that it doesn’t protect the right to an abortion. Abortion-rights supporters hope to build a majority coalition against the amendment that includes independents and moderates from both major parties.

In campaigning, Booker is showing the same zeal for abortion rights that he did for social and economic justice issues in 2020, when he barely lost his party's Senate primary — a surprisingly strong showing and launchpad for securing the Democratic nomination this year.

And he's using the issue to challenge Paul's deeply rooted national reputation as a champion of keeping government out of people's lives, even as the senator has vowed to support legislation toward ending legal abortion.

“I know how deeply personal this is," said Booker, who was raised in a Pentecostal church, while campaigning in Morehead during a statewide bus tour. "And I’m not here to tell somebody that they’re wrong for their personal belief. That’s not my place. What I am saying ... is the government should not be in...

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