From Jessica Morse <[email protected]>
Subject Two Years into Dobbs and the Dystopian future for American Women
Date June 24, 2024 10:51 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[link removed]

Two years ago today, the Supreme Court ended national reproductive freedom for American women. Abortion rights in America didn’t live to see age fifty. 

I am facing a dystopian reality where I will have fewer rights than my mother, and my three year old niece may have fewer rights than me. Access to birth control, IVF, medication to treat miscarriages and abortion are no longer secure — even in California. The Dobbs decision unmoored protections for our bodily autonomy. Today, our basic rights are now ricocheting around the US court system, uncertain which rights we may lose tomorrow. Decisions about how and when I become a mother and what health care I can use are no longer in my hands, or the hands of my doctor. Politicians like Kevin Kiley want to make that decision for me.  

Although the California State Constitution protects our rights, Kevin Kiley is trying to change that. Kiley is leading the Republican Study Committee which is pushing an abortion ban called the Life at Conception Act, which would ban abortion without exception, and criminalize IVF and even miscarriage. 

Twenty one states have banned or severely restricted abortions since the Dobbs decision.

This means twenty one states have seen drastic increases in maternal and infant mortality over states with legalized abortion. Women aren’t getting treatment for miscarriages — women are dying of sepsis and being forced to carry dangerous pregnancies to term. Women’s health care providers are fleeing these states for fear of prison. Abortion bans aren’t limiting unintended pregnancies. They are driving away health care for pregnant women.

The only way to protect reproductive freedom for women and families is for Congress to pass a law codifying Roe v. Wade.

As the only woman in the entire State of California flipping a competitive Congressional seat, I am working to get to Congress so I can help protect reproductive rights nationally and ensure women have a voice in Congress.

I’ll also work to invest in programs that reduce unintended pregnancy, like birth control and education. Let’s invest in programs that make it easier to choose to have children – like prenatal care, paid maternity and paternity leave, child tax credits, and affordable child care.

That’s why I’m asking you, friend, to join my campaign for Congress and elect a champion for reproductive rights. Codifying Roe and expanding women’s healthcare in Congress starts by flipping CA-03 — and every dollar we raise brings us that much closer to a future that’s safe for all women. Pitch in to my campaign so we can restore our rights once and for all. » [ [link removed] ]

If you have saved your payment information with ActBlue Express, your contribution will be processed immediately.

DONATE $10 [ [link removed] ]

DONATE $25 [ [link removed] ]

DONATE $50 [ [link removed] ]

DONATE $100 [ [link removed] ]

DONATE $250 [ [link removed] ]

ANOTHER AMOUNT [ [link removed] ]

We must secure reproductive rights and invest in programs and resources that make it safer and easier for women to get the healthcare they need. These conversations belong between women, their families, and their doctors – not the courts and Congressmen.

In solidarity,

Jessica

 

[link removed] [link removed] [link removed]

Email is one of the most important ways we communicate with our supporters, but if you'd like, you can opt to get just the most important messages here [ [link removed] ]! 

Paid for by Jessica Morse for Congress.

Jessica Morse for Congress

1079 Sunrise Ave

Suite B 275

Roseville, CA 95661

United States

www.morseforcongress.com/ [ [link removed] ]

This email was sent to [email protected] [ [email protected] ]. If you'd like to unsubscribe, please click here [ [link removed] ].
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis