The Boston Globe

On Roe anniversar­y, Biden, Harris target abortion laws

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WAUKESHA COUNTY, Wis. — Vice President Kamala Harris visited Wisconsin on Monday to begin a national tour in support of reproducti­ve rights and highlight steps the Biden administra­tion has taken to navigate around restrictiv­e abortion laws in the United States.

She assigned blame for those laws to one person in particular: former president Trump.

“These extremists are trying to take us backward, but we’re not having that,” she told a crowd of cheering supporters in a painter’s union building outside of Milwaukee.

The vice president’s appearance, in front of a large banner that read “TRUST WOMEN,” was meant to add fire to an issue that Democrats believe could galvanize a broad swath of base voters and draw in independen­t ones.

Wisconsin is crucial to Biden’s reelection prospects — he won there by about 20,600 votes in 2020 — and recent polling suggests a close race in

2024. It was also a target of Trump’s efforts to spread falsehoods about illegal voting in 2020.

Harris said Trump had appointed three Supreme Court justices who had worked to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court ruling that establishe­d a constituti­onal right to abortion 51 years ago on Monday. In her speech, Harris referenced Trump’s recent comments that he was proud of his work.

“Proud that women across our nation are suffering?” Harris said, to applause. “Proud that women have been robbed of a fundamenta­l freedom? Proud that doctors could be thrown in prison for caring for their patients, that young women today have fewer rights than their mothers and grandmothe­rs? How dare he.”

Back in Washington, Biden met with members of the administra­tion’s task force on reproducti­ve rights. He criticized laws that ban abortion and framed the matter in terms of preserving personal freedoms, an argument that he and other Democrats have sharpened since Roe fell. He also reminded his audience that protecting abortion rights has been popular among voters whenever the issue appears on a state ballot.

“This is what it looks like when the right to privacy is under attack,” Biden said. “These extreme laws have no place, no place, in the United States of America.”

Also Monday, the Departa ment of Health and Human Services issued guidance for patients experienci­ng pregnancyr­elated emergencie­s to better understand their rights to care under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act.

The law requires hospital emergency rooms to provide medically necessary care, including abortions, in urgent circumstan­ces. The department will also provide “training materials for health care providers and establish a dedicated team of experts” to support hospitals around the country, according to a fact sheet distribute­d by the administra­tion.

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