Albuquerque Journal

Pence speaks at anti-abortion march

VP cites Bible in speech; Trump appears by video

- THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence surprised thousands of protesters demonstrat­ing against abortion on the Mall in Washington by making unannounce­d speeches at Friday’s March for Life.

Pence and his wife, Karen Pence, strode onstage to the delighted cheers of a roaring crowd carrying anti-abortion posters and banners. Then Pence concluded his remarks with a second surprise: Trump, who addressed the march by video feed last year, had again prepared videotaped remarks for the marchers.

“When we look into the eyes of a newborn child, we see the beauty and the human soul and the majesty of God’s creation. We know that every life has meaning,” Trump said in his video, before listing his administra­tion’s antiaborti­on actions and vowing to reject any legislatio­n passed by the new Democratic-controlled House that “weakens” the campaign to prevent abortion access.

He said he signed a letter to Congress on Friday announcing his intent to veto any such law.

Pence gave a similar list of anti-abortion actions, including Trump’s appointmen­t of conservati­ve judges to powerful appellate courts across the country, and his reinstatem­ent of the Mexico City policy that bans U.S. government funding for any foreign aid organizati­on linked to abortion. And Pence, too, spoke with religious overtones: “Listen to the truth,” he said, then cited one of the anti-abortion movement’s favorite biblical verses. “Know that He who said, ‘Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you’ also said, ‘I will never forsake you.’”

Sixteen-year-old Daniel Pierini was among those cheering, thrilled to hear Pence describe the president’s reinstatem­ent of the Mexico City policy, which he supports.

“I like how he explained what the president has done so far for the pro-life movement,” he said, adding that he is a fan of Trump and Pence except for their opposition to rights for transgende­r Americans, because he has transgende­r friends.

Standing with classmates from his Christian school in Forest Hills, Pennsylvan­ia, Pierini said his own mother had a troubled pregnancy — a doctor told her that she was at risk of a miscarriag­e or could die if she carried her pregnancy to term, Pierini said — but she chose not to abort and give birth to him. Now, he hopes, the Supreme Court with two conservati­ve justices appointed by Trump will overturn the Roe v. Wade decision that made abortion legal nationwide.

Since the March for Life began in 1974, the year after the Roe v. Wade decision, the crowd has been largely youthful, including Catholic school students who ride buses from all over the country to attend the march. In recent years, march organizers said they have tried to welcome a broader group of people who oppose abortion.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anti-abortion activists march toward the U.S. Supreme Court during the March for Life in Washington on Friday.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Anti-abortion activists march toward the U.S. Supreme Court during the March for Life in Washington on Friday.

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