Houston Chronicle Sunday

Hundreds of protesters call on Biden to protect abortion rights

- By Stephanie Lai and Ava Sasani

WASHINGTON — More than 1,000 protesters gathered in front of the White House on Saturday, with hundreds risking arrest by sitting at the building’s gates, as they urged President Joe Biden to take more action to protect abortion rights at the federal level.

Despite rainy weather and the threat of flash flooding in the area, the protesters sat on the wet concrete, wearing green bandannas that read “bans off our bodies” and chanting, “Disobey!” and, “My body, my choice!”

Demonstrat­ors lined up along the gate, spanning the length of the White House. Some tied their bandannas to the gate, while several others tied themselves to it. Beau Loges, a transgende­r man from Vienna, Va., was one of them. He said he was raped as a child and was given abortion pills at age 11. Now 20, Loges said he did not think he would have finished school if he had not had an abortion. “I’m here for everyone” who cannot get one, he said.

The protest came one day after Biden issued an executive order intended to ensure access to abortion medication and emergency contracept­ion. But the order fell short of the demands of many activists and progressiv­e lawmakers who had called on the White House to protect abortion access after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last month. And the event Saturday reflected activists’ growing frustratio­n.

“You have the power to declare a public health emergency on abortion, codify reproducti­ve rights through executive action and expand the court,” Rachel O’Leary Carmona, executive director of the Women’s March, which organized the protest, said in a statement to the White House. “Be our champion and use that power.”

Xavier Becerra, secretary of health and human services, has been instructed by the president to identify potential actions that could protect abortion rights and report back within 30 days. He has said that the administra­tion has “no magic bullet” that can restore access.

Although the organizers had warned participan­ts that they might be arrested, they disbanded peacefully by early afternoon. Still, O’Leary Carmona said the possibilit­y of arrest was a calculated and necessary risk.

“It’s an escalated tactic for an escalated moment,” she said.

 ?? Alyssa Schukar/New York Times ?? Protesters chanted slogans like “bans off our bodies” outside the White House.
Alyssa Schukar/New York Times Protesters chanted slogans like “bans off our bodies” outside the White House.
 ?? Shuran Huang/New York Times ?? More than a thousand demonstrat­ors risked arrest at a Women’s March rally Saturday in front of the White House, demanding President Joe Biden do more to protect abortion rights by expanding the U.S. Supreme Court and other federal measures.
Shuran Huang/New York Times More than a thousand demonstrat­ors risked arrest at a Women’s March rally Saturday in front of the White House, demanding President Joe Biden do more to protect abortion rights by expanding the U.S. Supreme Court and other federal measures.

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