The Guardian (USA)

Kamala Harris urges voters to elect a ‘prochoice Congress’ in midterms

- Oliver Laughland

Vice-President Kamala Harris renewed pleas to voters ahead of the midterm congressio­nal races to elect pro-choice candidates, as the Biden administra­tion continues to face criticism from progressiv­es over a perceived lackluster response to the recent landmark supreme court decision striking down federal abortion rights in the US.

In an interview with CBS News on Sunday, Harris urged voters to elect a “pro-choice Congress” in November and highlighte­d that down-ballot contests at the local level would also be central to restoring abortion rights in certain parts of the country.

“You don’t have to advocate or believe that this is right for you or your family, but don’t let the government make the decision for her family, whoever she may be,” Harris said in a pre-recorded interview. “It means state offices, governors, secretarie­s of state, attorneys general. It means local races, who’s going to be your DA, who’s going to be your sheriff, enforcing laws that are being passed to criminaliz­e medical health providers, and maybe even the women who seek the service.”

On Friday, Joe Biden signed a limited executive order designed to protect access to reproducti­ve health services by expanding access to emergency contracept­ion and bolstering legal services to support people who cross state lines to seek an abortion.

But for many abortion advocates and progressiv­e Democrats, the president’s measures do not go far enough. The administra­tion has, for example, resisted calls to use federal land in antiaborti­on states to facilitate terminatin­g pregnancie­s, or subsidizin­g travel to people forced to travel in order to access services.

At least nine US states have banned abortion in the wake of 6-3 supreme court ruling that overturned the Roe v Wade decision that had enshrined the procedure as a constituti­onal right since 1973. The ruling makes it likely that around half the country – 26 states – will eventually outlaw abortion in some way.

The decision followed Donald Trump’s installati­on of three rightwing justices to the supreme court, paving the way for a conservati­ve super majority on the court.

Harris, then a US senator, voted against the former president’s appointmen­ts of Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. And she said on Sunday she had never believed assurances made in private and public by Gorsuch and Kavanaugh that they respected the precedence of the Roe decision.

“I start from the point of experience of having served in the Senate,” Harris said. “I never believed them. I didn’t believe them. So I voted against.”

Asked if the Democrats should have done more to enshrine the right to abortion into federal law when the party controlled both chambers of Congress, Harris responded: “We certainly believe that certain issues are just settled. Certain issues are just settled. And that’s why I do believe that we are living, sadly, in real unsettled times.”

Democrats have faced criticism for fundraisin­g drives off the back of the supreme court decision and recent polling indicates their party still faces a tough day at the ballot box in November, with Biden’s approval ratings plummeting and the party looking set to lose its majority in the House of Representa­tives.

On Sunday, Harris sought to quell calls for Biden to serve just one term as president before allowing a new Democratic nominee to contest the 2024 election.

“Listen to President Biden,” Harris said. “He intends to run. And if he does, I intend to run with him.”

 ?? Photograph: Yuri Gripas/EPA ?? Vice-President Harris meets with state legislator­s on reproducti­ve rights in the ceremonial office at the White House complex, on Friday.
Photograph: Yuri Gripas/EPA Vice-President Harris meets with state legislator­s on reproducti­ve rights in the ceremonial office at the White House complex, on Friday.

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