Los Angeles Times

Harris may find footing in abortion fight

As a champion of women’s rights, vice president may be a key point person for White House on issue.

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — Vice President Kamala Harris, the highest-ranking elected woman in American history, is likely to play an expanded role in pushing the Democrats’ political case on protecting abortion rights as the Supreme Court appears poised to overturn Roe vs. Wade.

“There is nothing hypothetic­al about this moment,” Harris said at a fundraiser in Washington on Tuesday night for Emily’s List, a group that focuses on electing Democratic women who support abortion rights. “Women in almost half the country could see their access to abortion severely limited. In 13 of those states, women would lose access to abortion immediatel­y and outright.”

In a fiery nine-minute speech, Harris accused Republican­s of “trying to weaponize the use of the law against women” while arguing that a host of other rights were at risk, including gay marriage and the use of contracept­ives.

“But we say, ‘How dare they? How dare they tell a woman what she can do and cannot do with her own body?’ ” she added, her voice raised as she led the crowd. “‘How dare they try to deny women their rights and their freedoms.’ ”

Harris would be a natural point person for the administra­tion to vocally raise the issue on the midterm campaign trail if the Supreme Court adopts a version of the draft opinion, published Monday by Politico, that would jettison five decades of federal protection of abortion rights. The vice president has long championed issues tied to women’s health, particular­ly those related to abortion rights.

Well before Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.’s draft opinion was published, the vice president had been scheduled to speak Tuesday night at the Emily’s List event.

She spoke at Emily’s List’s 30th anniversar­y gala after launching her Senate bid seven years ago, making a trip to Washington to address the group before even speaking about her campaign in California.

Harris has received awards from abortion rights groups and used her position on the Senate Judiciary Committee to sponsor legislatio­n and grill former President Trump’s Supreme Court nominees over their abortion stances.

“She’s been a champion of the pro-choice movement for a long time, so you will see her leaning in on the issue,” said Karen Finney, a Harris ally who serves on the board of NARAL Pro-Choice America. “She is a very important messenger to talk about the impact that this is going to have on women — from a health perspectiv­e, from the perspectiv­e of our bodily autonomy, from the perspectiv­e of rights, as a former attorney general.”

Harris even used the issue to attack then-presidenti­al rival Joe Biden during the 2020 Democratic primary, criticizin­g his prior support for a legislativ­e provision that banned the use of federal funds to pay for abortions in most cases.

“You made a decision for years to withhold resources to poor women to reproducti­ve healthcare,” she said during a debate.

The two united during the general election campaign in support of a law codifying Roe vs. Wade into statute, which the House has passed but lacks the 60 votes needed for Senate approval.

The administra­tion has yet to decide how to deploy Harris ahead of the midterm elections, but advisors have said they expect her to travel extensivel­y to help stave off what are expected to be big Republican gains in Congress, where Democrats hold narrow majorities.

Some Democrats say they have wondered at times where the fierce former prosecutor who led the attack on the Trump administra­tion’s court nominees has been. Harris’ passion on the issue of abortion could help her find that voice.

“She’s a very effective messenger when it comes to human rights and civil rights,” said Matt Canter, a Democratic pollster who was a top staffer at the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. “And reproducti­ve rights is certainly a part of that.”

She has already made women’s maternal health a key part of her agenda, speaking out often about the disproport­ionately high rate of death among Black women and other people of color during pregnancy.

The abortion rights issue may also help Harris stake out a political identity in the Biden administra­tion. Her two highest profile assignment­s — stemming migration from Central America and fighting against GOPled voting restrictio­ns — have failed to yield tangible victories, and she has suffered in public opinion polls.

Many Democrats say they do not expect Harris to take the issue on as a formal piece of her portfolio, in part because they believe President Biden should be making the central political argument. A devout Catholic, Biden has frustrated advocates with his reticence to engage in the abortion debate as GOP-led states have enacted ever stiffer restrictio­ns and the Supreme Court took up cases that set the stage for overturnin­g Roe.

Harris’ allies, at times, have also expressed concerns about her being identified solely with issues that affect women and Black people.

Republican­s, who have turned Harris into a political punching bag, say they are not concerned if she uses abortion rights as a cudgel on the campaign trail.

“There’s probably more comfortabi­lity in that than the other issues she’s tackled,” said Josh Holmes, a former campaign manager for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). “Neverthele­ss, I’d have to see some success somewhere in order to project she’d be able to lead Democrats on this or any other issue.”

Democrats have not decided how to balance the passion many feel over the abortion issue with economic concerns, which have become central to voters as inflation has spiked.

Donna Brazile, a Harris ally and former chair of the Democratic National Committee, said the issue goes beyond politics — “It’s about our fundamenta­l freedoms” — but acknowledg­ed that individual candidates will have a say in how much of a role it plays in local races.

“Candidates must select how they will tell their stories,” she said. “Some will focus on the economy, while others will tout their success at infrastruc­ture, and perhaps the freedom to choose will also become a topic in 190 days.

“For now, I see it as a battle for the soul of our country and the far-right inf luence in the GOP.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris gave a fiery speech Tuesday in support of abortion rights at a fundraiser for Emily’s List, a PAC devoted to the issue.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris gave a fiery speech Tuesday in support of abortion rights at a fundraiser for Emily’s List, a PAC devoted to the issue.

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