WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Jordan Vassallo is lukewarm about casting her first presidential ballot for President Joe Biden in November. But when the 18-year-old senior at Jupiter High School in Florida thinks about the things she cares about, she says her vote for the Democratic incumbent is an “obvious choice.”
Vassallo will be voting for a constitutional ballot amendment that would prevent the state of Florida from prohibiting abortion before a fetus can survive on its own — essentially the standard that existed nationally before the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the constitutional protections to abortion and left the matter for states to decide.
Passage of the amendment would wipe away Florida’s six-week abortion law, which Vassallo says makes no sense.
“Most people don’t know they are pregnant at six weeks,” she said.
Biden, despite her reticence, will get her vote as well.
Julia Fox reveals when her celibacy will end as she appears in see
Dick Van Dyke, 98, jokes he'll vote for Abraham Lincoln over Biden and Trump as the young
China embraces AI boom, diverse application scenarios
Peru's foreign minister to visit China
Head of FEMA tours deadly storm damage in Houston area as more residents get power back
Jude Bellingham scores late to seal El Clasico win
Israel says building of Gaza aid pier begins
Chinese FM meets with Vietnamese deputy PM in Beijing
Trump campaign video includes references to a 'unified Reich'
Inter secure Serie A title in heated win over Milan