Pritzker urges Congress to ‘be like Illinois’ in protecting abortion
services
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[May 12, 2022] By
GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker called on
Congress Wednesday to “be like Illinois” and codify abortion access into
federal law.
Pritzker made those comments at a Fairview Heights abortion clinic,
touting steps Illinois has taken to protect abortion services should a
U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision be
finalized as precedent.
“It’s long past time for this nation to codify Roe into federal law,”
Pritzker said. “Basic rights of women to control their own bodies are
about to be stripped away.”
The Women’s Health Protection Act that was before Congress Wednesday
would have protected an individual’s ability to determine whether to
continue or end a pregnancy and prevent states from acting to remove or
alter abortion protections in the future.
But the legislation did not pass the Senate this afternoon, falling by a
vote of 49-51 after Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin joined
Republicans and voted no. Democrats do not have the 60 votes necessary
to overcome a Republican filibuster.
Advocates at a news conference at the Fairview Heights Regional
Logistics Center warned that overturning Roe would create further
inequities in health care among low-income and minority women that
already have difficulties receiving quality care.
Opened in January, the RLC is operated by Planned Parenthood and the
Granite City-based Hope Clinic for Women, making abortion care more
accessible.
Natalee Clemons, a call center associate at Planned Parenthood, said she
was once a patient seeking an abortion in Missouri and had to jump
through “medically unnecessary hoops” to get care.
Clemons said she was 19 years old, about to attend college and newly
single when she learned that she was pregnant despite being on birth
control. Due to personal and medical reasons, parenthood was not an
option, she said. Missouri’s strict abortion laws, Clemons said, made it
difficult to end her pregnancy in a quick and convenient manner.
She said she had to make two trips to the clinic and listen to
“state-mandated propaganda” from her doctor, and she faced financial
burdens because of bans on insurance funding of the procedure.
“We all deserve the abortion experience Illinois has offered to
patients,” Clemons said. “The kind that centers medicine and people.”
Rep. LaToya Greenwood, D-East St. Louis, said the past two years have
amplified the gender, racial and economic inequities that have long
blocked access to quality health care for low-income and minority
people.
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a Fairview Heights abortion clinic,
calling on Congress to "be like Illinois" in protecting abortion
rights. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
Greenwood said the potential decision to overturn Roe v. Wade will be a
“matter of life and death” for Black and brown women.
“We should be ensuring that no one is being forced to be a mother
against their will,” Greenwood said.
Since the leaked draft opinion in a case challenging Roe v. Wade,
Illinois Democrats have warned that the overturning of that precedent
threatens the right to other reproductive health measures such as birth
control and is an “end to the constitutional right to privacy.”
Pritzker said other precedents set by the Supreme Court, such as
marriage equality, are also threatened and that Congress is going to
need to protect and codify a lot more rights in response to the “radical
right-wing Supreme Court.”
Illinois Democrats have also highlighted laws aimed at protecting and
expanding abortion access for Illinois residents and people from out of
state.
Yamelsie Rodriguez, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of the St.
Louis Region and Southwest Missouri, said that Illinois is on a “new
frontier of abortion access” and she is thankful lawmakers have taken
the steps to codify women's reproductive rights into law.
“We are a safe place not just for Illinoisians but for anyone who needs
abortion in a post-Roe world,” Rodriguez said.
In 2019, Pritzker signed the Reproductive Health Act enshrining in state
law the fundamental right to an abortion. Illinois is one of 16 states
to codify the right to an abortion and the only Midwestern state to do
so.
Pritzker said that since 2015, the number of out-of-state patients
seeking an abortion has tripled and he expects it to soar if Roe is
overturned.
In response to proposed laws in other states that aim to criminalize
people who travel out of state for an abortion and those who aid them,
Pritzker said he is working with the attorney general’s office and his
own general counsel about legislation that would protect Illinois
abortion providers from being sued or held criminally liable.
Rodriguez highlighted that since the opening of the RLC, case managers
have helped nearly 1,000 patients from seven states travel to Illinois
for an abortion. She said case-managers help out-of-state patients with
traveling, lodging and other financial assistance.
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