‘It’s important to fight’: US cities erupt in
protest as Roe v Wade falls
Soon after the supreme court struck down abortion
protection, pro-choice demonstrators took to the streets
Sam Levin
in Los Angeles and Victoria Bekiempis in New York
Sat 25 Jun
2022 03.14 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/24/us-cities-protest-roe-v-wade-abortion-rights
Massive
protests swept across the US on Friday in response to the supreme court
decision overturning the constitutional right to abortion.
Soon after
the decision was released, reversing federal reproductive protections that have
been in place for half a century, pro-choice demonstrators began gathering in
major cities and smaller towns in a wide range of communities and regions.
In addition
to the large demonstration outside the supreme court in Washington DC – where
activists shouted, “This decision must not stand! Legal abortion on demand!”
and “We won’t go back!” – protesters rallied in New York City, Los Angeles,
Chicago, Austin, Houston, Nashville, Kansas City, Topeka, Tallahassee, Miami,
Oklahoma, Boise, New Orleans and Detroit. Solidarity protests also erupted
overseas in London and Berlin.
“I’m in a
state of mourning and also very angry, and I want to turn that feeling into
something where I can contribute to the solution,” said Mary McNamara, a San
Francisco attorney who was heading out to protest in the northern California
city. “We have to go to the streets and raise our voices, even in blue states
where our rights are protected. This is one of the most consequential decisions
of the past 50 years … and we’re entering into a very dark era.”
McNamara is
president of the Bar Association of San Francisco, which is organizing to
provide free legal services to people impacted by the end of Roe v Wade protections.
She added: “I have no faith that the supreme court is going to stop here. I
think this is the start of a massive retrenchment on individual rights.”
In
Washington Square park in New York, Lucy Schneider, 101, arrived with her
granddaughter and carried a sign that said, Centenarian for Choice. “I’m very
much opposed to the current supreme court and everything they’re doing. It’s
just awful,” she said, adding, “I want her to be free to have an abortion if
necessary. I hope it won’t come to that, but I want her to be able to.”
Her
granddaughter, Emily Savin, 36, said she has been advocating for choice since
high school.
“It was
important to me to fight for this. I don’t think I could fully grasp that it
could really be taken away … I’m heartbroken and angry.”
Nearby,
Kelsey Clough, 29, said, “It wasn’t an option not to be here. It kind of feels
like my whole life’s falling apart when I see little kids get shot in a
classroom and all I see is politicians trying to control what I do. I feel
pretty helpless, but if me being here, holding my sign, is going to help
people, I want to be.”
By the
evening, protesters had taken over Park avenue in Manhattan, shouting, “Whose
streets? Our streets!” before marching toward Times Square where demonstrators
shouted chants against Fox News outside its offices.
In
Washington DC, outside the supreme court, where officers in riot gear were
deployed, protester Sara Kugler said, “This has been a fight 30 years in the
making to overturn women and people’s fundamental rights to make decisions
about their body. There is no coming back from this. There is no response other
than outrage and action.”
Anti-abortion
activists also gathered outside the court celebrating the decision soon after
it was announced, while critics chanted that the court was “illegitimate”.
Elsewhere in the nation’s capitol city, a pro-choice demonstrator shut down a
bridge after climbing its arch, and called on others to engage in nonviolent
civil resistance.
In
Missouri, one of the states with a “trigger law” to automatically ban abortion
after the Roe decision, an abortion clinic escort in the city of Jackson told a
reporter, “We are looking at suffering and death. How should we feel? We see
what’s coming. Those with means, they will get what they need. Those without
it, they will suffer. America is not ready for what’s about to happen.”
Cori Bush,
the Missouri congresswoman who has spoken out about her own abortion as a
teenager, tweeted: “Abortion care IS healthcare. It was so before this. And it
will remain so after this. We don’t care what a far-right extremist supreme
court that is in a crisis of legitimacy says. Your racist, sexist, classist
ruling won’t stop us from accessing the care we need.”
Indra
Lusero, the director of Elephant Circle, a birth justice organization, who was
heading to a protest in Grand Junction, Colorado, said the decision was not
surprising, but still painful to absorb: “It hits some of us directly in our
bodies. I felt it physiologically. This implicates our physical autonomy so
fundamentally.”
Lusero said
they were thinking of the disparate harms of the decision as more pregnant
people are unable to get abortions: “When people are coerced into carrying a
pregnancy to term, that comes with risks, and those risks aren’t equally borne
because of inequities built into our system. Black and Indigenous folks in
particular are more likely to experience mortality.”
In Boise,
Idaho, a demonstrator held a sign that read, “I shouldn’t have to fight a fight
my mom already won.” In Charlotte, North Carolina, activists shouted, “My body,
my choice!” And in downtown Los Angeles, marchers took over the streets,
chanting, “We are not your incubators. Fuck the court and the legislature!”
In some
liberal cities, progressive activists said they wanted to see a more aggressive
response from Democratic elected officials. In San Francisco, Jackie Fielder, a
former candidate for state senate, said she was frustrated to see Democrats
like House speaker Nancy Pelosi fundraising off of the decision given her
recent support of an anti-abortion Democrat, and the lack of action to expand
the supreme court or abolish the filibuster: “It’s hard to believe that
Democratic leadership are going to do anything.”
Fielder was
heading to the annual Trans March in the city’s Dolores Park where marchers
shouted, “When our community is under attack, what do we do? Rise up, fight
back!” and held signs saying, “Abortion rights are trans rights.”
She added,
“We’re very privileged in California to have access to abortion and other
reproductive justice means, but we really gotta dig deep to figure out how to
support people in other states. This is a matter of life and death.”
Lauren
Burke contributed reporting.

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