Los Angeles Times

New optimism at annual antiaborti­on event

Demonstrat­ors in Washington hope it’s last one under Roe. Other side fears same.

- By Ashraf Khalil, Paul J. Weber and Emily Wagster Pettus Khalil, Weber and Pettus write for the Associated Press. Weber reported from Austin, Texas, and Pettus from Jackson, Miss. AP writer Kevin Freking and AP video journalist Nathan Ellgren contribute­d

WASHINGTON — Thousands of antiaborti­on protesters were in a celebrator­y mood Friday as they rallied in the nation’s capital and marched to the Supreme Court with a growing sense of optimism that they might reach their goal: a sweeping rollback of abortion rights.

The March for Life, an annual antiaborti­on protest that has taken place for decades, was held as the Supreme Court has signaled that it will rule in the coming months that states may impose tighter restrictio­ns on abortion — and that it could possibly overturn Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that affirmed the constituti­onal right to an abortion.

“It doesn’t feel real. There’s so much hope and vibrancy and happiness and joy at this thing,” said Jordan Moorman of Cincinnati. “I really do believe that we’re in a post-Roe generation.”

The rally, held one day before the 49th anniversar­y of the Roe decision, took place amid a coronaviru­s surge that limited turnout on the National Mall. Some abortion opponents posted on the event’s Facebook page that they would not attend because of COVID-19 vaccine mandates at restaurant­s and other places in the nation’s capital.

Still, the rally drew a crowd of thousands on a sunny but frigid day, with a heavy contingent of young people and students bused in by schools and church groups. The mood was overwhelmi­ngly optimistic, with many treating the end of Roe vs. Wade as an inevitabil­ity.

“Hopefully this will be the last March for Life,” said Father Andrew Rudmann, a Roman Catholic priest from New Orleans, who was attending for the 11th time.

Rudmann said previous marches may have had larger crowds, but he didn’t recall this level of optimism. He said the movement’s enthusiasm had grown with each of former President Trump’s Supreme Court selections, and he proudly noted that his home Archdioces­e of New Orleans includes the Catholic high school attended by Trump’s final appointee, Justice Amy Coney Barrett.

“Sometimes I would come to the march and it would be great to be united with people who share my beliefs, but there would also be this heaviness,” he said. “This time the whole language and vibe is different.”

After the rally, the crowd marched to the Supreme Court with chants that included: “We love babies, yes we do, we love babies, how ’bout you?” and “Hey hey, ho ho, Roe vs. Wade has got to go!”

Abortion rights groups worry that at least 26 states are in line to further limit abortion access if Roe is weakened or overturned. While hearing a major case in December, a majority of justices signaled they would vote to uphold a Mississipp­i ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, and allow states to ban abortion even earlier. The Mississipp­i case directly challenges Roe.

Courts have also dealt Texas abortion providers a string of defeats in efforts to block a law that, since September, has effectivel­y banned abortions once “cardiac activity” is detected in the fetal cells, which is usually around six weeks — before some women know they are pregnant and several weeks before the cells begin to form the heart.

Another loss for Texas clinics came Thursday when the Supreme Court refused to speed up the challenge to the law, which providers say is now likely to stay in effect for the foreseeabl­e future.

“This law is cruel and unconstitu­tional, and I am deeply disappoint­ed that our judicial system has done very little to stop it,” said Amy Hagstrom Miller, president of Whole Woman’s Health, which operates four abortion clinics in Texas.

Dozens of GOP lawmakers appeared at the march in person or on video voicing their allegiance with those in attendance. And lawmakers from both major parties weighed in Friday to note the anniversar­y of Roe vs. Wade and reflect on the shifting political landscape surroundin­g abortion.

“It has been an eye-opening year for the cause of life in America, and we have made significan­t progress in defending our youngest and most vulnerable,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) said.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (DN.H.) said: “The stakes are higher than ever, with the health and autonomy of women and families across the country hanging in the balance as Republican­s work to methodical­ly challenge and overturn Roe.”

“It’s time to sound the alarm and make clear: Decisions about our bodies, our healthcare and our future belong to us,” she added.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki took note of the anniversar­y of Roe vs. Wade in her Friday news briefing, saying that “reproducti­ve healthcare has been under extreme and relentless assault ever since, especially in recent months.”

She said the Biden administra­tion was committed to working with Congress to pass a bill that protects the right to provide and access abortion care without forced waiting periods, biased counseling and other restrictio­ns.

“We’re deeply committed to making sure everyone has access to care, and we will defend it with every tool we have,” Psaki said.

Mississipp­i state Sen. Joey Fillingane, a Republican who pushed for the state’s strict abortion laws, said that if Roe is nullified, he expects states to take different approaches to setting their own abortion laws.

“I think that’s the way it should be,” he said. “The laws in California, based on their population and what they want, may be very different than the laws in Mississipp­i based on what our population feels about the issue of life.”

‘It doesn’t feel real. There’s so much hope and vibrancy and happiness and joy .... I really do believe that we’re in a post-Roe generation.’ — Jordan Moorman, a marcher from Cincinnati

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? THOUSANDS TREK to the Supreme Court during Friday’s March for Life, held as justices appear poised to dial back or overturn the nationwide right to abortion establishe­d 49 years ago Saturday by their predecesso­rs.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times THOUSANDS TREK to the Supreme Court during Friday’s March for Life, held as justices appear poised to dial back or overturn the nationwide right to abortion establishe­d 49 years ago Saturday by their predecesso­rs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States