Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Thousands rally for abortion rights in D.C., cities nationwide

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WASHINGTON — Lisa Branscomb marched on Saturday outside the Supreme Court among scores of abortion rights protesters and tried to hold back her tears.

All day she heard stories of women choosing abortion andsaw others holding signs proudly declaring they had, too. She had listened to the crowd chant “My body! My choice!”

“I’m not the only one,” said Ms. Branscomb, 52, who had an abortion when she was 22. “I never talk about it, but it’s important right now.”

Ms. Branscomb was among thousands who gathered in Washington and at hundreds of events across the country on Saturday to rally for abortion rights.

The demonstrat­ions came as a direct response to the leaked draft of an opinion by the Supreme Court signaling that it is positioned to overturn Roe. v. Wade, the 49-year-old decision that guaranteed a person’s constituti­onal right to have an abortion.

National tensions around abortion have ratcheted up since the leak this month. Abortion rights supporters and antiaborti­on advocates — sensing the arrival of a historic moment that could reshape American social and political life — have accelerate­d their efforts, with demonstrat­ions by those on both sides of the issue planned for the weekend.

The liberal groups that organized Saturday’s protests designed the events as a resounding message to leaders that the majority of Americans support upholding Roe. In Washington, women and men of all ages gathered on the National Mall.

They voiced anger over the wave of abortion bans and restrictio­ns taking hold in states across the country.

They held signs with drawings of uteri and images of coat hangers, to symbolize the dangerous measures people resorted to to terminate pregnancie­s before Roe.

Bethany Van Kampen Saravia, 39, of Mount Rainier, Md., walked through the crowd of thousands on the Mall. The white poster board with sparkly gold that she carried shared her story: “I had a baby & I had an abortion.”

She was 19 when she had her abortion, she said. She told her mother, who had previously told her about her own “frightenin­g” preRoe abortion, but it took years for Ms. Van Kampen Saravia to open up about her experience to others.

“My abortion was a deeply personal decision for me, and the thought of the government controllin­g that made me want to change laws,” said Ms. Van Kampen Saravia, a senior legal and policy adviser at Ipas, an internatio­nal reproducti­ve justice organizati­on. “The thought of my daughter having less protection than I did growing up absolutely breaks my heart. And it terrifies me.”

A sign resting on her 8month-old daughter’s stroller read: “My mommy

had an abortion. It is just HEALTHCARE.”

On the lawn outside the Washington monument, Katherine Moffitt, 72, embraced a fellow demonstrat­or. The two had met only a few minutes before but immediatel­y had bonded over having an abortion in the early 1970s, before the Roe decision.

Both came to the Washington, D.C., they said, because they remembered what life without access to legal abortions was like.

In 1973, Ms. Moffitt said, she drove from her home state of Rhode Island to Massachuse­tts to get an abortion. She had just graduated from college. Getting an abortion, she said, changed her life: She was able to go to graduate school and start a family when she was ready, she said. She drove in from Princeton, N.J., because she wanted to advocate for her two granddaugh­ters.

“Their future should not be with fewer rights than my life,” Ms. Moffitt said, tearing up.

The other woman, Melanie, who spoke on the condition that only her first name be used because of privacy concerns, said she got an abortion in 1971. She drove from Michigan to New York

City at the time. A nurse held her hand during the procedure.

When she heard Ms. Moffitt’s abortion story, she said, she was struck by how similar their background­s and stories were. “I’m just feeling grateful that I’m not alone in my absolute horror of what’s going down in our country for women, and I’m grateful to know that my sisters are out there doing what they can,” Melanie said.

Randy and Lauri Adams, both 60, drove from Cumberland, Md. Husband and wife stuck their signs into the ground.

Lauri’s read: “Only over my dead body will the gov control my g-daughter’s!”

Randy’s sign read as a reply: “I’m mad. She’s madder. Stop the madness. I have to live with her.”

They said they were there to advocate for their two daughters, son, and two grandchild­ren. If Roe is reversed, “it could send us back 50 years,” Randy said.

Nearby, music started blaring on the stage, and a roster of speakers began. In the early afternoon, U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., took the stage and told the crowd about getting an abortion as a teenager. It wasn’t legal at the time, she said, and she knew the risk she was taking in “the dark days” before Roe.

“We’re here today to tell these radical extremists that if you criminaliz­e people for having an abortion, if you make abortion illegal, if you take away our rights to make our personal decisions about our bodies, we will see you at the ballot box in November,” Ms. Lee said.

The Senate failed to advance legislatio­n Wednesday that would codify a constituti­onal right to abortion in federal law, after all 50 Republican­s and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., opposed moving ahead on the bill, called the Women’s Health

Protection Act.

Rachel O’Leary Carmona, executive director of the Women’s March, said the organizers of Saturday’s events are planning for many more demonstrat­ions this summer to continue to pressure lawmakers.

“We have to see an end to the attacks on our bodies,” Ms. Carmona said. “You can expect for women to be completely ungovernab­le until this government starts to work for us.”

Halfway across the country, several hundred people gathered Saturday morning in downtown San Antonio. Many in the crowd said they had attended abortion rights rallies in recent months to protest a restrictiv­e Texas law, which went into effect in September.

 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Participan­ts listen to speakers during Pittsburgh’s Bans Off Our Bodies rally on Saturday outside the City-County Building, Downtown. Story, Local, C-1
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Participan­ts listen to speakers during Pittsburgh’s Bans Off Our Bodies rally on Saturday outside the City-County Building, Downtown. Story, Local, C-1

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