The Guardian (USA)

Kamala Harris kicks off abortion rights tour on 51st anniversar­y of Roe v Wade

- Erum Salam

Kamala Harris kicked off her muchvaunte­d abortion rights nationwide tour in Wisconsin on Monday as Joe Biden convened a meeting of his taskforce on reproducti­ve healthcare access, in a tag-team effort to double down on what is likely to be a key campaign issue this year.

The vice-president chose the 51st anniversar­y of the Roe v Wade ruling to begin the Reproducti­ve Freedoms Tour, announced in December, in the battlegrou­nd state of Wisconsin, which the president won in the 2020 presidenti­al election by just over 20,000 votes.

Roe v Wade, the supreme court decision that enshrined the federal right to abortion, was overturned in June 2022 after the then president Donald Trump nominated three conservati­ve justices to the nation’s highest court.

The decision was a major blow to supporters of reproducti­ve rights, but since the ruling seven states – including the conservati­ve stronghold­s of Kentucky, Kansas and Montana – have held ballot referendum­s where voters chose to protect abortion rights. The issue also appeared to hurt Republican­s in the 2022 midterm elections.

Wisconsin is a notable starting point for Harris’s reproducti­ve freedoms tour. Last year, abortion rights propelled a Democratic victory in a critical election for the state supreme court.

In the first of many similar scheduled events, Harris is expected to announce support for increased access to abortion and contracept­ives through the new emergency care law, Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (Emtala).

She will also denounce Trump, the runaway frontrunne­r for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, for his hand in overturnin­g the federally protected right to abortion.

“Proud that women across our nation are suffering?” Harris will say, according to excerpts from her speech obtained by the Associated Press. “Proud that women have been robbed of a fundamenta­l freedom? That doctors could be thrown in prison for caring for patients? That young women today have fewer rights than their mothers and grandmothe­rs?”

The following day, Harris will be joined by Biden for another abortionfo­cused event, along with their spouses, Jill Biden and Doug Emhoff.

Biden’s re-election campaign also rolled out a new campaign ad on Sunday, titled Forced, which aims to tie Donald Trump directly to the abortion issue.

In Dobbs v Jackson, the 2022 supreme court case that overturned Roe, a Mississipp­i law that banned most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy with certain medical exceptions was upheld, negating the constituti­onal right to abortion and overruling the precedent set by Roe more than half a century ago.

In a statement on the 51st anniversar­y of Roe v Wade, Biden said: “Fifty-one years ago today, the supreme court recognized a woman’s constituti­onal right to make deeply personal decisions with her doctor – free from the interferen­ce of politician­s. Then, a year and a half ago, the court made the extreme decision to overturn Roe and take away a constituti­onal right.

“As a result, tens of millions of women now live in states with extreme and dangerous abortion bans. Because of Republican elected officials, women’s health and lives are at risk.”

When announcing her tour in December, Harris said: “Extremists across our country continue to wage a full-on attack against hard-won, hardfought freedoms as they push their radical policies – from banning abortion in all 50 states and criminaliz­ing doctors, to forcing women to travel out of state in order to get the care they need.

“I will continue to fight for our fundamenta­l freedoms while bringing together those throughout America who agree that every woman should have the right to make decisions about her own body – not the government.”

 ?? ?? Kamala Harris at a virtual first meeting of the taskforce on reproducti­ve healthcare access in Washington, on 3 August 2022. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
Kamala Harris at a virtual first meeting of the taskforce on reproducti­ve healthcare access in Washington, on 3 August 2022. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

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