Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Abortion-rights rally

Crowd at Capitol hears calls for activism on range of issues.

- RACHEL HERZOG

The halls at the state Capitol rang with cheers, chants and calls to action Saturday, after a crowd gathered for the state’s ninth annual Rally for Reproducti­ve Justice.

In past years, participan­ts rallied with signs on the Capitol steps, but this year’s attendees congregate­d inside the building to listen to a panel of speakers while snow flurries swirled outside.

The rally, and others like it across the country, marked the 46th anniversar­y of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision. On Jan. 22, 1973, the court affirmed the constituti­onal right to abortion.

The Arkansas Coalition for Reproducti­ve Justice, which organized the Little Rock event, defines “reproducti­ve justice” as the right to choose whether and when to have children, and the right to parent those children in safe, healthy environmen­ts.

The speakers focused broadly on activism, covering a range of national and local topics, including immigratio­n, police violence

against members of minority groups, gay and transgende­r discrimina­tion and problems in the city’s public schools.

“Democracy is not this static thing … it’s participat­ory,” said Camille Richoux with the coalition. She urged people to continue fighting for human rights and not to take their own rights for granted.

From the podium, Richoux read aloud a statement from Sylvia Perkins, whose 15-yearold son Bobby Moore was fatally shot by a Little Rock police officer in 2012. The officer was ultimately fired and found liable for the teen’s death.

“It is your action … that enriches our society and ensures a better world for our children,” Perkins wrote, thanking activists and organizers.

Pamela Merritt, a founder and co-director of the abortion-access organizati­on Reproactio­n, urged attendees to become leaders and organizers.

“When politician­s organize with excitement and enthusiasm and energy to take health care away from millions of Americans, you are the organizer you’ve been hoping would come to your hometown,” she said. “This is not about finding the right candidate … it’s not about finding the perfect solution. This is about truly believing in the power of our ideas. We rise up and we fight back. We organize and we rally and we lobby and we take action, and we will win.”

The rally coincides with the 92nd General Assembly’s regular legislativ­e ses- sion, which started Monday. Abortion opponents who describe themselves as prolife and legislator­s have said they want to pass laws that restrict access to abortion in the state. Sen. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville, recently said he’s “ready to end abortion altogether,” through legislatio­n that would challenge Roe v. Wade.

At the national level, Arkansas’ U.S. Sens. Tom Cotton and John Boozman, both Republican­s, reintroduc­ed legislatio­n that would ban abortions at 20 weeks of gestation.

Merritt said, “If you’re going to say that you’re pro-life, there’s lives that you need to be ‘pro’ for.”

Outside the room, about a dozen protesters rallied with signs reading “abortion is murder.” There were no physical confrontat­ions, and the abortion-rights rally’s organizers urged attendees to leave quickly after the speeches were finished.

Today, the 41st annual March for Life will be held in Arkansas. That event focuses on rememberin­g “the lives that have been lost [because of abortion] and just to remind us all that lives need to be protected,” said Rose Mimms, the executive director of Arkansas Right to Life, the march’s organizer.

Maria Meneses, the abortion-rights rally’s emcee, urged participan­ts not to acknowledg­e the abortion-opponents’ rally and to focus on their own fight.

“We must fight for everyone and be intentiona­l and accessible about it,” the Little Rock college student and activist said. “When you walk out of these doors, keep your head held high and remember that you are fighting for your ancestors.”

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 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE ?? People applaud a speaker Saturday during the ninth annual Rally for Reproducti­ve Justice held in the Old Supreme Court Room at the state Capitol in Little Rock.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE People applaud a speaker Saturday during the ninth annual Rally for Reproducti­ve Justice held in the Old Supreme Court Room at the state Capitol in Little Rock.
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Keynote speaker Pamela Merritt, co-founder and co-director of Reproactio­n, speaks Saturday during the Rally for Reproducti­ve Justice in Little Rock. ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Keynote speaker Pamela Merritt, co-founder and co-director of Reproactio­n, speaks Saturday during the Rally for Reproducti­ve Justice in Little Rock.

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