Exclusive-New Biden abortion rights push addresses both women and men
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[August 17, 2022]
By Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Cheered by a
decisive win for abortion rights in a Kansas vote and eyeing November
midterm elections, the White House is launching a push for abortion
access that aims to influence men as well as women, sources with direct
knowledge told Reuters.
The Biden administration's three-prong playbook leans on two specific
federal statutes to target states that limit abortion, communicates to
voters the impact on women, and accentuates how forced pregnancies
negatively affect both women and men.
Senior White House officials, advisers and abortion rights advocates
have held multiple strategy and engagement calls in recent days,
including an Aug. 4 call with nearly 2,000 participants, said the
sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private
meetings.
Abortion rights advocates have accused U.S. President Joe Biden's
administration in the past of being slow to act around a Supreme Court
ruling in June that ended the constitutional right to abortion. Two
Biden executive orders and engagement with key stakeholders led by Vice
President Kamala Harris have assuaged some concerns, several told
Reuters.
The White House is "really going all the way in trying to promote their
message on the issue of abortion in the midterms," said Lawrence Gostin,
faculty director of Georgetown University's Institute for National and
Global Health Law, who has been working with the White House. "They are
hoping this will play well among suburban women and that was Biden's
edge in the presidential election."
A senior White House official said that the administration thinks the
issue could win Democrats' support from many Republican voters during
the midterms.
NEW LITIGATION STRATEGY
The Biden administration plans to lean on two specific federal statutes,
which predated the abortion ruling, to fight its legal challenges - the
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) and FDA
preemption under the Federal Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act (FDCA), the
sources said.
EMTALA requires hospitals that accept Medicare funds to provide medical
treatment to people that arrive with an emergency medical condition.
That includes providing a woman an abortion if her life is in danger.
This law is the backbone of the U.S. Department of Justice's lawsuit
against the state of Idaho, but may be hard to enforce, some legal
experts say.
The FDA preemption argues states cannot ban an approved abortion drug
because federal law preempts or overrides state law. More than 30 states
have enacted legislation that restricts access to medication.
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U.S. President Joe Biden gestures as he
delivers remarks on the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 at the White
House in Washington, U.S., July 28, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth
Frantz/File Photo
Mini Timmaraju, president, NARAL Pro-Choice America, who also is
working with the White House on the issue, said the litigation
strategy is key.
"It's not just executive orders and policies, it's (legal)enforcement,"
she said.
VOTING, RESEARCH AND MESSAGING
The White House plans to replicate the success in Kansas, said the
sources. It is closely tracking similar ballot initiatives in
California, Kentucky, Michigan, and Vermont and gubernatorial races
like Michigan's, where abortion has become a central issue, sources
said.
In Kansas, a team of the Democratic National Committee made about
30,000 phone calls and sent over 130,000 text messages to help turn
out the vote.
The White House is compiling research on the physical and mental
harms women face if they're denied access to abortion, as well as
the economic impact that forced pregnancies can have on men, women
and families; and plans to communicate that to voters with a
consistent messaging plan, sources said.
It will target men in its messaging, asking them to consider how
their sisters, nieces, cousins could be affected if abortions were
unavailable, and to think about the costs related to supporting an
unplanned pregnancy, the sources said.
In 2020, the National Bureau of Economic Research found that women
who are forced to have an unwanted baby face medical costs
associated with prenatal care, birth, postpartum recovery in
addition to costs associated with raising a child that exceed $9,000
a year.
Another message will be aimed at religious Americans, telling them
they don't have to change their faith to support abortion rights,
they just need to resist government overreach, they said.
"The idea is to be much more disciplined and consistent in messaging
to break through to the everyday American," said one of the sources.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Editing by Heather Timmons
and Aurora Ellis)
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