Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Billie Jean King’s abortion story offers window into life without Roe v. Wade

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Billie Jean King, the tennis legend who shared her painful journey to getting an abortion in her memoir “All In,” joined other female athletes calling for the protection of women’s reproducti­ve rights.

A draft of a Supreme Court majority opinion striking down abortion rights codified in the landmark Roe vs. Wade ruling was published by Politico Monday night, triggering responses from activists around the country. Chief Justice

John G. Roberts Jr. confirmed the authentici­ty of the document that could still change as justices deliberate, with an official ruling expected to be handed down in two months.

King, a Long Beach, Calif., native, joined a chorus of athletes who opposed the potential erosion of reproducti­ve protection­s.

“A woman has had the right to make decisions for her body since #Roevwade in 1973,”

King posted on Twitter.

“If Roe falls, millions of Americans would lose access to critical reproducti­ve care. It is vital that we do all we can to protect this legislatio­n.”

Fellow tennis legend Martina Navratilov­a also vented on Twitter, posting, “Also a worthy reminder — other than [Justice Amy] Coney Barrett, all the men taking away [women’s] rights to choose are well past the age when women could actually get pregnant. So once again — old, mostly white, men are deciding [women’s] fate. I hate the whole lot …”

The Washington Mystics’ Natasha Mccloud wrote on her Twitter account, “The constituti­on was written by white men. For white men.”

She added, “America is NOT pro life. They’re pro birth. We still pay women less than men. Not every woman has access to health care. We don’t focus on fixing and building our education system. Price of housing …. disgusting.”

King’s position was shaped by her experience having an abortion in California before the Roe vs. Wade ruling. During a Los Angeles Times

Book Club interview, she discussed the decision.

“I got pregnant and I just was so confused and in such a bad way, and I think a baby is the most important responsibi­lity in the world and I just didn’t feel like this was

... I just could not do this,” she said, noting she had already requested a divorce from her husband and shared with him that she was attracted to other women. Her husband, who she said she loved and often called her best friend, declined to grant the divorce.

In her memoir, King wrote about California’s policy of allowing abortions before Roe vs. Wade if they were for therapeuti­c reasons and performed in a hospital. Her husband, Larry, joined her explaining to a committee why she needed the procedure.

“Any woman wanting an abortion had to go before a medical committee first and explain why she believed her pregnancy would ‘gravely impair’ her ‘physical or mental health,’” King wrote. “So that’s what I had to do. Explaining to a panel of 10 or fifteen strangers why I qualified for an abortion was probably the most degrading thing I’ve ever experience­d. When Larry and I walked into the room and saw them looking back at us, Larry said to me under his breath, ‘This is ridiculous.’ “

King is now among many athletes lobbying for support of abortion rights.

The Sparks’ Nneka Ogwumike and USC swimmer Lauren Blair joined Megan Rapinoe, Sue Bird and more than 500 other current and former high school, college and pro athletes who signed an amicus brief in support of

Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, the respondent in the case the Supreme Court is now reviewing that could nullify Roe vs. Wade.

 ?? Tribune News Service/getty Images ?? Billie Jean King leaves the stage after being inducted as one of the The Original 9 at the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame on July 17, 2021, in Newport, Rhode Island.
Tribune News Service/getty Images Billie Jean King leaves the stage after being inducted as one of the The Original 9 at the Internatio­nal Tennis Hall of Fame on July 17, 2021, in Newport, Rhode Island.

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