Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden’s current silence on abortion rights worries liberals

- By Lisa Lerer

State legislatur­es have introduced more than 500 restrictio­ns on abortion over the past four months. The Supreme Court plans to take up a case that could weaken or even overturn the constituti­onal right to abortion enshrined nearly a half-century ago in Roe v. Wade.

And as reproducti­ve rights advocates sound alarms about what they see as an existentia­l threat to abortion rights, many worry that the leader they helped elect is not meeting the moment.

Despite the urgency felt by much of his party, President Joe Biden has said little about abortion publicly while in office. In fact, he hasn’t said the word itself — an avoidance so noticeable that one women’s health group has created a website tracking his reluctance, Didbidensa­yabortiony­et.org.

Many activists fear that Biden’s personal discomfort with the issue is keeping him from leading the Democratic Party into a more offensive position on abortion rights, both through more aggressive policymaki­ng and leveraging the agenda-setting power of the presidency.

“What we really need is for President Biden to be a bold and transforma­tional leader on abortion right now, but we haven’t seen that yet,” said Gretchen Borchelt, vice president for reproducti­ve rights and health at the National Women’s Law Center. “It’s a different world from when he was vice president, and so far we haven’t felt that recognitio­n of urgency from this administra­tion.”

Jen Psaki, the White House press secretary, has been just as circumspec­t in her public appearance­s. Asked about topics like new state laws restrictin­g abortion and the looming court case, she has relied on euphemisms like “women’s fundamenta­l rights” and “the right to choose.” A White House statement in January on the 48th anniversar­y of the Roe v. Wade decision promised to defend “reproducti­ve health.”

After Biden signed executive orders expanding abortion access and overturnin­g restrictio­ns on the use of taxpayer dollars for clinics that refer or counsel patients to terminate preg

nancies, he took a victory lap for protecting “women’s health access” and returning to the policies that existed before former President Donald Trump took office.

“If you’re unable to say the word, you’re also going to have trouble making sure that the people who are most impacted get the care and the protection­s that we need,” said Renee Bracey Sherman, an abortion rights advocate who started the website monitoring Biden’s reticence. “To me that’s not a champion. That is not someone who is really even trying to show up for people who need abortions.”

Biden’s cautiousne­ss on an issue central to his political base comes as he confronts the realities of leading a Democratic Party that shifted sharply to the left during the Trump administra­tion. While Biden has moved left himself on many issues including abortion, liberals are finding their ambitions curtailed on immigratio­n, criminal justice, gun control and other priorities by their razor-thin control of the Senate and a president whom they are pushing to take a more aggressive approach.

Abortion rights are particular­ly challengin­g personal terrain for Biden, an observant Catholic who underwent a decades-long conversion to the cause. Some conservati­ve American bishops have called for Biden, the country’s second Catholic president, to be denied communion because of his support for abortion rights, a move the Vatican warned against this month.

Congressio­nal Democrats pushing legislatio­n on abortion say they are largely satisfied with the administra­tion’s stance.

“They’re juggling quite a few policies, but their agenda is an agenda that values reproducti­ve rights for women,” said Rep. Barbara Lee of California, a Democrat who has introduced several bills to roll back abortion restrictio­ns. “I’m confident that we have a partner in the White House.”

No matter what approach Biden takes to expanding abortion rights, his administra­tion will be starting from behind. Access to abortion is more vulnerable than it has been since the constituti­onal right was won in Roe, in part because of the work of social conservati­ves who spent years methodical­ly rallying the millions who oppose abortion rights from statehouse­s to Washington.

Liberals lost the Supreme Court for a generation when Justice Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed last fall, expanding a conservati­ve majority. If the court moves to overturn Roe, abortion would be likely to quickly become illegal in 22 states. Even if the law is upheld in some form, this year is already on track to be the most damaging state legislativ­e session to abortion rights in a decade, according to a report by the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

After decades in which convention­al political wisdom dictated that abortion energized the right, many Democratic strategist­s and candidates now see the issue as a powerful way to mobilize their voters, particular­ly suburban women. Nationwide, a majority of Americans support legal abortion access in some or all cases.

“From the presidenti­al race to House races, this is an extremely motivating factor,” said Meredith Kelly, a Democratic strategist who worked for Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s presidenti­al campaign and for House Democrats’ campaign arm during their takeover of the chamber in 2018.

Biden entered the Senate in 1973 as a 30-year-old, just weeks before the Roe v. Wade decision. He soon concluded that the Supreme Court had gone “too far” on abortion rights, and years later voted for a constituti­onal amendment that would have allowed states to overturn Roe. He has cast his evolution as a matter of wrestling with the teachings of his faith. But his shifting views over the years also reflect a political calculatio­n about the changing mores of his party.

Under pressure from activists and allies early in the 2020 Democratic primary race, Biden reversed his decadeslon­g support for the Hyde Amendment, a measure that prohibits federal funding for most abortions, and that supporters of abortion rights say all but bans the procedure for poor women and women of color who rely on Medicaid for their health care. Campaign aides who urged Biden to shift his stance have said his initial reluctance was tied to his faith.

In office, Biden has reversed several Trump administra­tion policies, including rolling back restrictio­ns on abortion pills, removing a ban on federally funded medical research that uses fetal tissue from abortions, and reversing limits on funding for U.S. and internatio­nal groups that provide abortion services or referrals.

Some abortion advocates say those early moves fall short. His joint address to Congress did not mention the threat to abortion rights, referring only in passing to “protecting women’s health.” Harris, once fairly outspoken on the issue, has made no notable remarks on it since taking office.

 ?? STEFANI REYNOLDS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden leaves church after attending Mass March 27 in Wilmington, Del. Biden is an observant Catholic who underwent a decades-long conversion to the cause of abortion rights.
STEFANI REYNOLDS / THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden leaves church after attending Mass March 27 in Wilmington, Del. Biden is an observant Catholic who underwent a decades-long conversion to the cause of abortion rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States