The Palm Beach Post

We will not accept loss of abortion rights

- Lillian Tamayo Guest columnist

We are approachin­g the second anniversar­y of Roe v Wade’s demise, a grim reminder of the Supreme Court’s callous overturnin­g of a recognized federal right to abortion. For almost 50 years, the Supreme Court respected the fundamenta­l principle protecting a person’s right to make their own medical decision, including the decision to have an abortion. In June 2022, the Supreme Court’s Justice Alito and four other conservati­ve judges shattered the time-honored precedent, shifting the power to the states to regulate aspects of abortion.

No surprise to many of us, less than 18 months later, 21 states either have banned abortion or restricted the procedure. Anti-abortion state legislator­s across the country moved with lightning speed to pass bans, heartlessl­y uncaring as to who and which people were most impacted. Florida followed suit in the 2023 legislativ­e session, passing a near total abortion sixweek ban. It didn’t matter that Floridians like Deborah Dorberts’, and countless others’ heartbreak­ing stories dominated headlines showcasing the cruelty of these bans, as women’s lives were placed at risk or parents were forced to carry devastatin­g pregnancie­s to full term.

As of today, abortion remains legal in Florida, as we await a Supreme Court decision to determine if the six-week ban will take effect or not. Polls have repeatedly indicated the majority of Floridians favor the right to make their own personal decision regarding their care – whether it’s a Democrat, a Republican or an Independen­t.

Abortion is personal, not political. Floridians Protecting Freedom coalition, the statewide organizati­on leading the campaign to place a constituti­onal amendment on the 2024 ballot, has secured more than the 891,523 validated signatures required to allow voters an opportunit­y to shape their destinies. The prospect of Florida overturnin­g Republican efforts to gut abortion access at the ballot box has the administra­tion running scared. Florida Attorney General Moody, with hopes to derail the ballot process, submitted a brief declaring Floridians will be “confused” by the ballot language.

What Floridians are not “confused” about is that the DeSantis administra­tion and the tone-deaf Florida legislatur­e will do anything to block the will of voters. Whether it is so-called voter reform, gerrymande­red districts, or stacking the Florida Supreme Court with anti-abortion judges, Florida’s state leadership is unrelentin­g in their attacks on Florida’s long-establishe­d constituti­onal precedence regarding bodily autonomy.

As we await the Florida Supreme Court’s decisions on both the abortion bans and the abortion constituti­onal amendment language, the 80 organizati­onstrong Floridians for Reproducti­ve Freedom coalition doubled down on their commitment to promote and support abortion access for all those in need of care. Florida’s abortion clinics and abortion funds will continue providing care as well as help with resources and practical support, including travel, lodging and childcare. Online resources like Charley (http:// www.chatwithch­arley.org/) and Plan C (http:// www.plancpills.org) are secure and confidenti­al resources for people seeking to obtain abortion pills by mail.

There is no sugar-coating that dismantlin­g Roe was a devastatin­g decision with profound repercussi­ons impacting fundamenta­l human rights and public health outcomes across the country. And its reversal accelerate­d the brimming outrage of voters, translatin­g their disapprova­l at the ballot box. Cruel abortion restrictio­ns and years of government­al intrusion into what is clearly a personal medical decision fuels a growing trajectory of abortion rights support across Florida and the nation.

Take note, Florida, there is a new mantra: “I’m no longer accepting the things I cannot change. I am changing the things I cannot accept.”

Lillian Tamayo, a member of the Palm Beach Post Editorial Advisory Board, previously was President/ CEO at Planned Parenthood South, East and North Florida.

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