Albuquerque Journal

Senate bid to save Roe v. Wade falls to GOP filibuster

High court could overturn ruling

- BY LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — The Senate fell far short Wednesday in a rushed effort toward enshrining Roe v. Wade abortion access as federal law, blocked by a Republican filibuster in a blunt display of the nation’s partisan divide over the landmark court decision and the limits of legislativ­e action.

The almost party-line tally promises to be just the first of several efforts in Congress to preserve the nearly 50-yearold court ruling, which declares a constituti­onal right to abortion services, but is at serious risk of being overturned this summer by a conservati­ve Supreme Court.

President Joe Biden said that Republican­s “have chosen to stand in the way of Americans’ rights to make the most personal decisions about their own bodies, families and lives.”

Biden urged voters to elect more abortion-rights lawmakers in November and pledged in the meantime to explore other ways to secure the rights establishe­d in Roe.

For now, his party’s slim majority was unable to overcome the filibuster led by Republican­s, who have been working for decades to install conservati­ve Supreme Court justices and end Roe v. Wade. The vote was 51-49 against proceeding, with 60 votes needed to move ahead.

Congress has battled for years over abortion policy, but the Wednesday vote to take up a House-passed bill was given new urgency after the disclosure of a draft Supreme Court opinion to overturn the Roe decision that many had believed to be settled law.

Over several days, Democratic senators delivered speeches contending that undoing abortion access would mean great harm, not only for women, but also for all Americans planning families and futures.

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., said that most American women have only known a world where abortion access was guaranteed, but could face a future with fewer rights than their mothers or grandmothe­rs.

“That means women will not have the same control over their lives and bodies as men do, and that’s wrong,” she said in the run-up to Wednesday’s vote.

Security was tight at the Capitol where Vice President Kamala Harris presided and has been bolstered across the street at the Supreme Court after protesters turned out in force last week following the leaked draft.

Harris can provide a tiebreakin­g vote in the 50-50 split Senate, but that was beside the point Wednesday. One conservati­ve Democrat, Joe Manchin of West Virginia, voted with the Republican­s, saying he supported keeping Roe v. Wade, but believed the current bill was too broad.

“The Senate is not where the majority of Americans are on this issue,” Harris said afterward.

 ?? ?? Catherine Cortez
Catherine Cortez

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States