Waikato Times

Abortion rights backers rally in anger over post-Roe future

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Abortion rights supporters demonstrat­ing at hundreds of marches and rallies yesterday expressed their outrage that the Supreme Court appears prepared to scrap the constituti­onal right to abortion that has endured for nearly a half-century and their fear about what that could mean for women’s reproducti­ve choices.

Incensed after a leaked draft opinion suggested the court’s conservati­ve majority would overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling, activists spoke of the need to mobilise quickly because Republican-led states are poised to enact tighter restrictio­ns.

In the nation’s capital, thousands gathered in drizzly weather at the Washington Monument to listen to fiery speeches before marching to the Supreme Court, which was surrounded by two layers of security fences.

The mood was one of anger and defiance, three days after the Senate failed to muster enough votes to codify Roe v. Wade.

‘‘I can’t believe that at my age, I’m still having to protest over this,’’ said Samantha Rivers, a 64-year-old federal government employee who is preparing for a state-by-state battle over abortion rights.

Caitlin Loehr, 34, of Washington, wore a black T-shirt with an image of the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s ‘‘dissent’’ collar on it and a necklace that spelled out ‘‘vote.’’

‘‘I think that women should have the right to choose what to do with their bodies and their lives.

And I don’t think banning abortion will stop abortion. It just makes it unsafe and can cost a woman her life,’’ Loehr said.

A half-dozen anti-abortion demonstrat­ors sent out a countering message, with Jonathan Darnel shouting into a microphone, ‘‘Abortion is not health care, folks, because pregnancy is not an illness.’’

From Pittsburgh to Los

Angeles, and Nashville, Tennessee, to Lubbock, Texas, tens of thousands participat­ed in events, where chants of ‘‘Bans off our bodies!’’ and ‘‘My body, my choice!’’ rang out. The gatherings were largely peaceful, but in some cities there were tense confrontat­ions between people on opposing sides of the issue.

Polls show that most Americans want to preserve access to abortion – at least in the earlier stages of pregnancy – but the Supreme Court appeared to be poised to let the states have the final say.

If that happens, roughly half of states, mostly in the South and Midwest, are expected to quickly ban abortion.

The battle was personal for some. In Seattle, some protesters carried photograph­ic images of conservati­ve justices’ heads on sticks.

Teisha Kimmons, who attended the Chicago rally, said she feared for women in states that were ready to ban abortion. She said she might not be alive today if she had not had a legal abortion when she was 15.

‘‘I was already starting to self harm and I would have rather died than have a baby,’’ said Kimmons, a massage therapist from Rockford, Illinois.

In New York, thousands of people gathered in Brooklyn’s courthouse plaza before a march across the Brooklyn Bridge to lower Manhattan for another rally.

‘‘We’re here for the women who can’t be here, and for the girls who are too young to know what is ahead for them,’’ Angela Hamlet, 60, of Manhattan, said to the backdrop of booming music. –

 ?? AP ?? Abortion-rights demonstrat­ors rally at the base of the Washington Monument before marching past the Supreme Court yesterday in Washington.
AP Abortion-rights demonstrat­ors rally at the base of the Washington Monument before marching past the Supreme Court yesterday in Washington.

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