Friend,
Today would have been the 50th anniversary of Roe v. Wade. With heavy hearts and worried souls, today we’re taking some space here with all of you to look at what’s happened since we lost federal abortion protections. Please read to the end because our reproductive freedom indeed remains in peril. The actions we take now must be bold, effective — and non-negotiable. That’s what #VOTEPROCHOICE is determined to do this year (and every year).
Before we look back at the good, the bad, and the ugly, we want to quickly look forward to the solution.
Our collective attention must now turn to electing prochoice champion candidates in over 94,000 open seats this year. Please consider making a recurring donation of $22 so we can continue the fight to elect amazing candidates to state and local offices.
The Good
Abortion is a winning issue everywhere. We are a staunchly prochoice nation. We always have been and we remain so. How do we know? Every time abortion has been on the ballot in the last year, it won:
- In Kansas and Kentucky, voters rejected ballot measures to remove abortion rights from the state’s constitution.
- In Montana, voters rejected a “Born-Alive Infant Protection Act.”
- In California, Michigan, and Vermont, voters overwhelmingly voted to establish state constitutional rights to abortion.
And our local and state prochoice champions are fighting for reproductive freedom:
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St. Louis Mayor Tishaura Jones signed legislation to direct $1 million in federal coronavirus relief funds to help people cover the logistical costs of accessing abortion.
- The Atlanta City Council donated $300,000 to Access Reproductive Care Southeast to help people pay for abortions and other related costs, including out-of-state travel or childcare expenses.
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90 elected prosecutors committed not to prosecute abortions.
Abortion access is being litigated in the courts:
- An elected Ohio county judge blocked the state’s six-week abortion ban.
- When Michigan Republicans tried to stop the Reproductive Freedom For All ballot initiative from moving forward, the state Supreme Court (which we helped flip to Democrat in 2020!) overrode them—and voters proceeded to overwhelmingly protect abortion access.
- An elected Texas judge threw out a case to charge a doctor who provided abortion care.
- 39 states use some kind of election to determine at least some state and local judges — and countless times this year, judges protected our freedoms. In 2023 and beyond, we have the opportunity to elect so many more prochoice judges who will commit to protecting our reproductive rights.
The Bad
No matter what state you live in, abortion bans impact care:
- Most abortions are banned in at least 14 states.
- 10 other states have severe restrictions, affecting more than 40 million people.
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66 clinics in 15 states had to close or stop offering abortion care in the first 100 days after Roe v. Wade was overturned.
- The cost of abortion care has skyrocketed, with many now costing over $1,300.
- Abortion clinics in states where abortion is protected are overwhelmed by patients forced to come from other states.
Anti-abortion laws hurt everyone:
- In Wisconsin, a woman bled for more than 10 days from an incomplete miscarriage after emergency room staff would not remove the fetal tissue.
- A Texas woman almost died because she couldn’t get an abortion.
- A Louisiana woman carrying a fetus with no skull was forced to travel to New York to get an abortion.
- Abortion bans make it difficult for arthritis and lupus patients to receive vital medication.
- Anti-abortion laws negatively impact EVERYONE, including IVF patients, ectopic pregnancy and high-risk pregnancy patients, people who miscarry, and people who simply don't want to be pregnant.
The Ugly
Extremists are coming after medication abortion:
- According to the Guttmacher Institute, 118 medication abortion restrictions were introduced in 22 states in 2022.
- Anti-abortion extremists are looking to ban websites that provide abortion medication.
- In a federal lawsuit, extremists allege the FDA abused its authority 23 years ago when it authorized abortion medication.
- Students for Life of America filed a citizens’ petition claiming that at-home abortion with pills is an environmental hazard because people flush fetal tissue down the toilet, and traces of the pills could make it into groundwater.
- Radical conservatives are working with anti-abortion representatives in the states to write legislation that will further limit abortion access. Even in blue states, extremists are trying to ban abortion care in city limits.
They want our birth control too:
- In July, 195 House Republicans voted against the Right to Contraception Act, a bill that would create a legal right to obtain and use all FDA-approved forms of birth control.
- A Trump-appointed judge ruled that Texas teens can’t get birth control without their parent’s consent.
And even though the FDA recently lifted restrictions on medication abortion, this doesn’t mean abortion is now easily accessible to everyone. Not only will anti-abortion extremists try to stop these efforts, but pharmacies that want to dispense medication abortion will have to do additional paperwork and training, and many may choose not to.
People deserve compassionate, accessible abortion care and deserve to choose what their care looks like.
Without federal abortion protections, it’s more important than ever that we elect prochoice champions at EVERY level who will both stand up to the attacks of extremists and proactively move to protect abortion.
That’s why our 2023 strategy is two-fold:
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Expand candidate outreach, education, and endorsement programs: with our new partnership with ActBlue, we’re focusing on electing prochoice criminal and legal champions in more than 3000+ of these positions.
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Expanding and serving the prochoice electorate: Focusing on KY, VA, TX, PA, OH, NV, AZ, we will invest in prochoice voters who aren’t traditionally served by the electoral ecosystem, like women of color and newly registered voters.
The prochoice majority showed up in 2022, and we know we can build on that momentum and empower voters to elect prochoice leaders.
In honor of what would be the 50th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, make a recurring gift of $22 today and help us with the fights ahead.
In solidarity,
Heidi L. Sieck
CEO/Co-founder
#VOTEPROCHOICE
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