Miami Herald

Don’t pay attention to GOP fear-mongering on abortion

- BY FABIOLA SANTIAGO fsantiago@miamiheral­d.com

In a post-Roe v. Wade world, where abortion rights are left to states, there’s no more important issue on the November ballot — for all Floridians — than to secure a woman’s constituti­onal right to reproducti­ve healthcare.

This is why, with President Joe Biden campaignin­g on the issue of abortion in Tampa Tuesday, the Florida GOP and Gov. Ron DeSantis have been busy fear-mongering and spinning falsehoods about what setting those rights in stone would entail under Florida’s proposed constituti­onal amendment.

“Radical,” DeSantis called the amendment. “Extremist.”

It’s neither.

The amendment doesn’t change, as DeSantis contended, the Legislatur­e’s authority to require parental or guardian permission for a minor to get an abortion.

But the governor and his attorney general, Ashley Moody, couldn’t win their all-out effort to get Florida’s conservati­ve Supreme Court to prevent the effort to give voters the right to decide an issue so crucial to women. One that could also have tremendous impact on the presidenti­al election.

So Republican­s are out to win. Their strategy is to confuse independen­t voters.

Don’t fall for it.

The amendment would protect Floridians from the GOP’s end goal: a total ban.

For women, the abortion fight in Florida isn’t about Biden or Democrats vying to return to power in state politics.

It’s personal.

Abortion is a health concern that directly affects only women. Men as partners have a stake, but there’s no comparison. And yes, abortion vs. forced birth is a decision that can break families in myriad ways, another reason that politician­s shouldn’t be involved.

For everyone’s sake, take the red-Florida politics out of abortion, or our children and grandchild­ren may not forgive you for the future being denied to our loved ones — and strangers whose lives we know nothing about and shouldn’t judge.

SUPPORT DAUGHTERS

No, it isn’t a cliche to say that abortion is healthcare. The decision to give birth or not affects a woman’s physical and mental health like nothing else, except perhaps a deadly disease. The right to an abortion cannot be taken off the table without risking lives, as not everyone has a safe pregnancy.

In fact, a new study by Northweste­rn Medicine reports that the maternal mortality rate is accelerati­ng at an alarming pace in every age group, the greatest relative increases among people aged 25 to 29 and 30 to 34 years old.

When it’s your daughter with a zygote or an embryo inside of her threatenin­g her life, you, her parents — Democrat or Republican — will want doctors to have constituti­onally-guaranteed access to whatever tools they need to keep her healthy. At that moment, you won’t want medical care profession­als hamstrung by laws set by a political party that could send them to prison.

And this is our reality: Medical profession­als are petrified of being prosecuted now that a six-week ban on abortion, passed by the Florida Legislatur­e and signed into law by DeSantis, goes into effect May 1, 30 days after the Florida Supreme Court’s ruling.

DEFEND RIGHTS

A six-week ban is, in the real world, an outright ban.

Most likely, so early in a pregnancy, a woman — or a teenager, especially — won’t know she’s pregnant. And if you don’t think your daughter is having sex because you’ve taught her better, you’re living in a delusional world. If you don’t think she can be date-raped in high school or college, you’re living in a bubble.

Be your daughters’ and granddaugh­ters’ champions and defend abortion rights in Florida. Question the motives of the people who have taken away those rights, placing obstacles in front of girls that boys don’t have to face.

There’s nothing

“wrong” with “enshrining abortion,” as the antiaborti­on lobby is framing the effort to pass Amendment 4, in the Florida Constituti­on.

What’s inconceiva­ble is how little Florida’s Republican leaders care about female life.

Fabiola Santiago: 305-376-3469, @fabiolasan­tiago

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States