Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

DAY AFTER RULING, SIDES PLOT THEIR POST-ROE MOVES

- BY LEAH WILLINGHAM AND SCOTT BAUER

CHARLESTON, W. Va. — A Texas group that helps women pay for abortions halted its efforts Saturday while evaluating its legal risk under a strict state ban. Mississipp­i’s only abortion clinic continued to see patients while awaiting a 10-day notice that will trigger a ban. Elected officials across the country vowed to take action to protect women’s access to reproducti­ve health care, and abortion foes promised to take the fight to new arenas.

A day after the Supreme Court’s bombshell ruling overturnin­g Roe v. Wade ended the constituti­onal right to abortion, emotional protests and prayer vigils turned to resolve as several states enacted bans and both supporters and opponents of abortion rights mapped out their next moves.

In Texas, Cathy Torres, organizing manager for Frontera Fund, a group that helps pay for abortions, said there is a lot of fear and confusion in the Rio Grande Valley near the U.S.Mexico border, where many people are in the country without legal permission.

That includes how the state’s abortion law, which bans the procedure from conception, will be enforced. Under the law, people who help patients get abortions can be fined and doctors who perform them could face life in prison.

“We are a fund led by people of color, who will be criminaliz­ed first,” Torres said. “We just really need to keep that in mind and understand the risk.”

Tyler Harden, Mississipp­i director for Planned Parenthood Southeast, said she spent Friday and Saturday making sure people with impending appointmen­ts at the state’s only abortion clinic — which featured in the Supreme Court case but is not affiliated with Planned Parenthood — know they don’t have to cancel them right away. Abortions can still take place until 10 days after the state attorney general publishes a required administra­tive notice.

Mississipp­i will ban the procedure except for pregnancie­s that endanger the woman’s life or those caused by rape reported to law

enforcemen­t. The Republican speaker of the Mississipp­i House, Philip Gunn, said during a news conference Friday that he would oppose adding an exception for incest.

Harden said she has been providing informatio­n about funds that help people travel out of state to have abortions. Many in Mississipp­i already were doing so even before the ruling, but that will become more difficult now that abortions have ended in neighborin­g states like Alabama. Right now Florida is the nearest “safe haven” state, but Harden said, “we know that that may not be the case for too much longer.”

At the National Right to Life convention in Atlanta, a leader within the anti-abortion group warned attendees Saturday that the Supreme Court’s decision ushers in “a time of great possibilit­y and a time of great danger.”

Randall O’Bannon, the organizati­on’s director of education and research, called out medication taken to induce abortion.

“With Roe headed for the dustbin of history, and states gaining the power to limit abortions, this is where the battle is going to be played out over the next several years,” O’Bannon said. “The new modern menace is a chemical or medical abortion with pills ordered online and mailed directly to a woman’s home.”

Protests broke out for a second day in cities across the country, from Los Angeles to Oklahoma City to Jackson, Mississipp­i.

In the L.A. demonstrat­ion, one of several in California, hundreds of people marched through downtown.

Turnout was smaller in Oklahoma City, where about 15 protesters rallied outside the Capitol. Oklahoma is one of 11 states where there are no providers offering abortions, and it passed the nation’s strictest abortion law in May.

“Half the population of the United States just lost a fundamenta­l right,” said Marie Adams, who has had two abortions for ectopic pregnancie­s, where a fertilized egg is unable to survive. “We need to speak up and speak loud.”

 ?? AJ MAST/AP ?? Abortion-rights activists rally at the Indiana Statehouse on Saturday in Indianapol­is.
AJ MAST/AP Abortion-rights activists rally at the Indiana Statehouse on Saturday in Indianapol­is.

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