Abortion rights supporters and opponents mark one year without Roe v. 
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		 [June 19, 2023] 
		By Julia Harte 
		 
		(Reuters) - Abortion rights advocates and opponents are set to mark this 
		week's one-year anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to 
		overturn the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that had legalized the 
		procedure nationwide with events to rally voters and highlight the 
		ongoing fights over access. 
		 
		The ruling, whose anniversary comes this Saturday, had a swift impact by 
		freeing states to ban abortion. Republican-controlled legislatures in 
		numerous states passed restrictive legislation, with near-total abortion 
		bans now in place in 14 states even as opinion polls show that a 
		majority of Americans want abortion legal in all or most cases. 
		 
		Abortion rights supporters did manage in some states to fight off new 
		proposed restrictions or codify abortion protections. 
		 
		Ahead of a rally set for Saturday in Washington, Rachel Carmona, 
		executive director of the Women's March activist organization, 
		acknowledged the devastating blow dealt to reproductive rights by the 
		Supreme Court's reversal last year. 
		 
		"We are framing this to lift up the wins that we've had in the last 
		year, but of course it's a somber day for us," Carmona said. 
		
		
		  
		
		The rally, sponsored by several national groups, aims to ensure the day 
		"does not go down as a victory lap for people who are trying to strip 
		reproductive rights from our country," Carmona added. 
		 
		The White House said Vice President Kamala Harris will use a speech on 
		Saturday in Charlotte, North Carolina, to make the case for national 
		legislation to protect abortion rights - currently an unlikely prospect 
		in a deeply divided Congress. Harris is set to deliver her speech a week 
		before a new Republican-backed law takes effect in the state, banning 
		abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy, down from the current 20-week 
		window. 
		 
		Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America on Tuesday will announce a new 
		partnership with former White House advisor Kellyanne Conway, according 
		to Emily Osment, a spokesperson for the anti-abortion group. Conway, who 
		served as an adviser to former President Donald Trump, will lead the 
		group's messaging and help train Republican candidates to "get on 
		offense to talk about pro-life protections moving forward," Osment said. 
		 
		Conway will be joined at Tuesday's press conference by state lawmakers 
		who have helped pass new abortion restrictions since Roe was overturned 
		as well as staff from anti-abortion pregnancy crisis centers who have 
		faced threats and attacks since the ruling, Osment said. 
		 
		In last November's congressional elections, Republicans narrowly won 
		control of the House of Representatives but overall did not perform as 
		well as had been expected. Strategists in both parties have attributed 
		Democratic strength at the polls at least in part to higher support from 
		women who back abortion rights. 
		
		
		  
		
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            Abortion rights demonstrators protest 
			outside the United States Supreme Court as the court rules in the 
			Dobbs v Women's Health Organization abortion case, overturning the 
			landmark Roe v Wade abortion decision in Washington, U.S., June 24, 
			2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo 
            
			  CAMPAIGN ISSUE 
			 
			Activists on both sides of the abortion debate have made clear that 
			the issue will remain central in next year's congressional and 
			presidential races.  
			 
			Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America is urging candidates seeking the 
			Republican nomination to back a federal ban on abortions after 15 
			weeks of pregnancy. Democratic President Joe Biden, an abortion 
			rights supporter, is seeking re-election. 
			 
			Reproductive rights advocates said they hope to harness popular 
			support for legalized abortion to help elect officials who could 
			reverse limits that already have been imposed and protect access 
			where it remains intact. 
			 
			Some 64% of respondents in a Reuters/Ipsos poll in May said they 
			were less likely to support a presidential candidate who backed laws 
			severely restricting abortion, compared to 36% who said they were 
			more likely to back such a candidate. 
			 
			Critical election battlegrounds include Virginia, the Southern state 
			with the least restrictive abortion laws and one of a few places 
			where voters will elect new state legislators this November, 
			according to Christina Reynolds, spokesperson for the group Emily's 
			List that backs Democratic female candidates who support abortion 
			rights. 
			 
			Glenn Youngkin, Virginia's Republican governor, wants greater limits 
			on abortion, but a narrow Democratic majority in the state Senate 
			has blocked any such measure. Reynolds said her group will be 
			fighting to protect that Senate majority and try to pick up seats in 
			the state House of Delegates. 
			 
			The biggest expansions of abortion rights over the past year 
			occurred in states including Michigan and Minnesota where Democrats 
			control both the legislature and the governor's office, Reynolds 
			said. 
			
			
			  
			"We want to make more states Michigan and Minnesota," Reynolds said.
			 
			 
			NARAL Pro-Choice America, another group involved in Saturday's rally 
			in Washington, is mobilizing its 4 million members to canvass, make 
			phone calls and collect signatures for ballot measures such as an 
			Ohio state constitutional amendment that would protect abortion 
			rights, according to Ryan Stitzlein, the group's senior political 
			director. 
			 
			In every election since the Supreme Court ruling, Stitzlein said, 
			"abortion has been front and center, and a huge motivating factor 
			for voters - and we expect that to continue." 
			 
			(Reporting by Julia Harte in New York; Editing by Will Dunham and 
			Colleen Jenkins) 
			
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