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In front of Supreme Court, a nation divided on abortion drug

Sandhya Raman, CQ-Roll Call on

Published in Political News

Melanie Salazar, executive director of Pro-Life San Francisco, who is 31 weeks pregnant, had the message “Fully Human” written on her belly. She said she was part of a group of about 10 from Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising who had traveled to be in front of the court.

“I’ve been feeling my baby move for months, and my baby is equally human like me,” she said. “Any disruption to the abortion industrial complex, like a pro life-win in this case, is a win for the pro-life movement, a win towards protection and conception in all 50 states.”

A group of 11 Texas residents, including eight from Amarillo, shared a more local message. Speaking together, they said they had come to support Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Kacsmaryk issued the initial district court ruling in the case.

The group held signs with quotes from Kacsmaryk, saying the local judge’s opinion resonates with them. They said they support Amarillo becoming a sanctuary city for life and preventing abortion trafficking.

Anna Pilato, director of federal public policy for the Christian Medical & Dental Associations, which is part of the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, said the outcome of the case will determine what society’s values are in a speech to a crowd outside the court Tuesday.

“I am so shocked by the FDA’s callous actions in systematically removing safety standards for chemical abortion drugs. How can they remove these standards and distribute these high-risk drugs without the safety protocols,” said Pilato, a former Department of Health and Human Services official during the Trump administration.

Abortion rights

On the left, advocates emphasized the drug’s safety.

 

Mira Michels, a former researcher and now volunteer with Aid Access, said she came to the protests Tuesday to prove mifepristone’s safety. She demonstrated the group’s Roe-bots, moving robots that can dispense the drug in states with what are known as telemedicine abortion shield laws.

Michels, who said she is not pregnant, swallowed a dose of mifepristone as part of her demonstration to show it would not cause ill effects.

“We are here because we want people to know that abortion is safe. It should be legal and should continue to be legal, but if it becomes illegal, it does not matter. We will be here,” she said.

J.J. Straight, the national campaigns director for reproductive rights for the ACLU, arrived around 3:45 a.m. to reserve space and set up for the day.

Straight said a multi-organization effort between groups that support abortion rights had buses arriving in the morning, with individuals coming from Ohio, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and West Virginia to participate.

Ryan Stitzlein, vice president of political and government relations for Reproductive Freedom for All, said the possibility that the case could affect abortion access for all 50 states was important to voters, particularly in places with state-level protections like New York, California and Michigan.

“We’re gonna do all we can to make sure that we reelect President Biden, but we also need to deliver a pro-reproductive freedom Congress that can actually pass protections,” Stitzlein said. “This case threatens their access to abortion care, and so people need to be paying attention. They need to be paying attention to who’s elected at the federal level, and that’s why the stakes have never been higher in this next election.”


©2024 CQ-Roll Call, Inc. Visit at rollcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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