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American women have 99 problems on their minds these days, any given day of the week. How is it even possible to choose the one that comes out on top, when you’re accosted daily with news of potential nuclear war, years of sexual harassment cover-ups, and bickering among the very people in the country who are charged with keeping the nation safe? But when you really delve into it, the single most pressing issue facing American women today is the one that underlies everything. The issue that is, sometimes on a day-to-day basis, very literally a matter of life and death. And while it may seem like an issue that can be compartmentalized and only discussed in certain situations, it actually pervades everything else, especially for the nation’s most vulnerable individuals. It’s health care.

You’ve been hearing a lot about the Trump administration’s attack on women’s rights, particularly reproductive rights, and reasonably so. The administration, and fellow Republicans in the legislature, advocate for health care plans that essentially punish women for the unavoidable situation of having been born female, by threatening to slash required coverage of birth control, abortions, and maternity care. The people making those decisions, a majority of whom are men, seem to not have given any thought to how things like access to contraception and abortion are actually men’s issues, too.

These attacks, unfortunately, aren’t only coming from the religious right, either. Progressive darling Bernie Sanders infamously maintained that abortion access was an “identity issue” that could be dismissed in favor of the economic issues that, he argued, were really more important. As colorblind as this take on the issue of reproductive rights is, it offers the perfect springboard from which to delve into how health care, for the people who lack it, is irrevocably tied to the (very real and pervasive) economic issues that Sanders is always harping on.

For women, particularly low-income women and women of color, unequal access to health care is one of the many factors perpetuating the economic gap that is perpetuating problems in the country. It’s all the more difficult to give your children, for example, the support they need to succeed in school when you get pregnant unexpectedly, don’t have access to an abortion, and then have another child to provide for. You can’t invest in the sorts of things that would make your life more secure — property, for example — when too much of your salary goes toward the medicine that keeps sick family members alive. And with the home-oriented and caregiving tasks still falling overwhelmingly on the shoulders of women, access to comprehensive health care — including reproductive health care — is of paramount importance for America’s women.

DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images

So, health care is a big problem facing millions of people in the United States, both men and women. But even during an administration that seems dead-set on taking away coverage for millions come hell or high water, there are still things that you can do to make sure that more and more Americans have the coverage that they need.

You’ve heard a lot about calling your congresspeople or getting in touch with them in literally any other way, and that advice still applies, even when there’s not a repeal effort currently underway. But what often goes forgotten is that it’s not just your representatives at the federal level that matter; representatives at the state level can also make a big difference, and they have fewer constituents to take care of, anyway. This means that if you make the effort to track down your state and local officials, they might be more receptive to your thoughts than someone at the national level, whose office may be fielding hundreds of calls a day.

When it comes down to it, though, the most important thing you can do in order to ensure health care for everyone is to get out and vote for candidates who support universal health care (or at least the next steps toward that) in every single election that you possibly can — municipal, state, and midterm elections includedDemocrats historically have lower turnout during midterm elections, which are coming up in 2018 — and if this remains true for the upcoming election, that could launch Republicans into even more significant majorities in Washington and in state assemblies around the country. Look up your municipal elections, see what’s going on in your state, and find a way to vote, no matter what it takes — because you can bet that Republican congressmen and the people who support them are going to do that, too.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images News/Getty Images

It looks like a long road now — but this problem is absolutely solvable. There are countries all over the world where women don’t have to worry about whether they’ll be able to get an abortion; where they are guaranteed time off to take care of new babies; where there’s no question about whether or not their birth control will be free.

There’s no reason that this couldn’t happen in the United States too, with continued, intense pressure on the politicians who run the country. There’s no better time than now to really take on this issue — and there’s no better person than you to take part in it. Live by that, and eventually the changes will come.

https://www.bustle.com/p/what-is-the-biggest-issue-women-in-america-face-it-falls-under-this-one-umbrella-2899062?utm_content=buffer13766&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

“Beatriz was our friend, a warrior, who never stopped fighting for her life,” said the local feminist group Agrupacion Ciudadana por la Despenalización del Aborto, in a statement.

Beatriz Garcia, whose fight against El Salvador’s draconian prohibitions on abortion moved the country—and the world—in 2013, died October 8 from complications after a motorcycle accident a few days prior.

Garcia, who chose to be known only as “Beatriz” during her struggle to interrupt her life-threatening pregnancy in 2013, suffered from the autoimmune disease discoid systemic lupus erythematosus, which was aggravated by lupus nephritis, an incurable disease that affects multiple organs. According to the Salvadoran Institute of Forensic Medicine, the lupus, combined with a case of hospital-acquired pneumonia, ultimately led to her death.

“Beatriz was our friend, a warrior, who never stopped fighting for her life,” said the local feminist group Agrupacion Ciudadana por la Despenalización del Aborto, in a statement.

In 2013, Beatriz, a then-22-year-old rural woman living in poverty, became pregnant for the second time. She had a 1-and-a-half year-old son. Her physicians at the public hospital in San Salvador advised her that, due to the lupus, the pregnancy was a potentially fatal threat to her life. In addition, they determined that the fetus was anencephalic, or lacking a brain. At most, they said, it would survive only a few hours outside her uterus. Their medical recommendation was to interrupt the pregnancy.

Although all concerned were well aware that abortion was illegal under all circumstances in El Salvador, Beatriz requested an abortion from the government. The Agrupacion, along with other feminist and human rights groups, mounted a campaign for Beatriz’s right to terminate her pregnancy based on the risks to her life and the fact that the fetus was not viable.

Rewire reported in April 2013:

Within the past few days Amnesty International has initiated a petition asking for life-saving medical care, including an abortion; the United Nations has spoken; and the Salvadoran Minister of Health, Dr. Maria Isabel Rodriguez, has requested that the Supreme Court approve the request. Dr. Rodriguez emphasized that Beatriz’s kidney function continues to deteriorate as the pregnancy advances, and that the public health system is ready to perform an abortion. The Salvadoran Attorney General for Human Rights also supports the request.

Beatriz’s story wove together the threads of multiple inequity that affected—and still affect—the lives of Salvadoran women:

Beatriz’s life is threatened by her health conditions and a high-risk pregnancy. However, the deeper threats come from an intractable and misogynistic political and religious system which criminalizes women for being young, poor, rural women. Right now the eyes and voices of the world constitute Beatriz’s hope for life. She wants to live.

Her struggle forever changed the consciousness of the movement and the country.  Activists such as Mariana Moisa from the Agrupacion talk about Beatriz’s story as the “parting of the waters.”

“There will always be ‘before Beatriz and after Beatriz,’” Moisa told Rewire in an unpublished 2016 interview.

Salvadoran families who had never discussed the topic of abortion watched news stories about a young woman with whom they could identify. There had never been anyone who went public asking for an abortion before Beatriz. The subject was so taboo that the word was rarely used out loud, even by feminists. Because of the social and religious taboos and the illegality, it just wasn’t discussed. Although procedures continue to be clandestine, Beatriz helped shift the image of an abortion patient to that of a young mother with a serious medical condition who wanted to live and raise her child.

As reported for Rewire in 2013:

The Salvadoran feminist organization Agrupación Ciudadana por la Despenalización del Aborto … petitioned the Salvadoran Supreme Court on April 15 to intervene and to direct medical personnel to provide without fear of criminal prosecution the procedures Beatriz needs to save her life. Under current law, both Beatriz and any medical personnel involved in an abortion would face criminal charges and prison time. The court responded with a temporary directive that medical personnel provide the care necessary to guarantee her life and health while they make a decision regarding the petition for an abortion. Medical personnel were also directed to present to the court within five days a report on the condition of the mother and the fetus to inform their deliberations.

At a May 2013 event, feminists confronted then-President Mauricio Funes with a banner asking, “Mauricio Funes, if Beatriz were your daughter, would you let her die?” He was forced to respond publicly for the first time, saying, “Beatriz has the right to make decisions about her life.”

As the October 9 statement from the Agrupacion explained, the Salvadoran Supreme Court did not provide an adequate response to Beatriz’s situation. “Her case went to the Inter-American Human Rights Commission and Court, which issued measures under which a cesarean section was performed in the 26th week of pregnancy,” on June 3, 2013. Her baby lived about five hours, as was expected.

As the statement noted, following a motorcycle accident on October 4, Beatriz was taken to National Hospital of Jiquilisco for “mild cranial brain trauma.” She was then transferred to the Usulután National Hospital, after the Jiquilisco Hospital was flooded with rains from tropical storm Nate. Two days after the accident, and after her discharge from the hospital, she began to have respiratory difficulties: a combination of her lupus and the pneumonia she had contracted while in the hospital.

She died in San Miguel early Sunday.

According to the Agrupacion, Beatriz’s death was at least in part a result of the health system ineffectively treating her lupus. Since 2013, the group says it has been trying to access more comprehensive health care for her. Though the details of her death are still unclear, the group’s statement said, “For the second time, the State failed Beatriz. The public health system did not guarantee quality care, nor understand her condition, similar to what happened in 2013 when physicians in the public network did not interrupt her pregnancy for fear of being criminally punished under the laws which prohibited all abortions and criminalized both the woman and physicians.”

As the Agrupacion statement noted, in November 2013, Beatriz sued the Salvadoran state for “not allowing her to undergo a therapeutic abortion and for all the violations she and her family suffered during the 81 days the process lasted when she requested to have her pregnancy terminated.”

“The petition, filed before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, seeks to prevent other Salvadoran women from repeating the same torture that Beatriz lived,” the statement continued.

That case is ongoing.

And the same law that prevented Beatriz from obtaining an abortion in a timely manner is still on the books, despite years of intense activism seeking legislative change.

Hasta siempre, Beatriz, until always, Beatriz,” the group’s statement concluded. “We will continue to transform our pain, anger, and indignation into struggle until there is justice for all the Beatrizes in El Salvador.”

https://rewire.news/article/2017/10/11/beatriz-brought-el-salvadors-abortion-ban-world-stage-dies-following-motorcycle-accident/

Advocates for a pregnant 17-year-old girl held in a Texas facility for immigrant children who have crossed the border alone are asking a federal judge to allow her to get an abortion, over the opposition of U.S. and state officials.

A federal magistrate judge in San Francisco has scheduled a hearing Wednesday on a request filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, which accuses the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services of refusing to let the girl be taken for the procedure.

Rochelle Garza, a lawyer appointed to represent the girl’s legal interests, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that she may be up to 14 weeks pregnant. Texas state law prohibits most abortions after 20 weeks.

Garza says the teen is from Central America, like most people caught crossing the U.S.-Mexico border without legal permission. She declined to give the girl’s name or identify the specific country where she was from, citing the girl’s privacy as a minor, but said that the girl wanted an abortion in part because she had seen her parents abuse another sibling who was pregnant.

With Garza’s help, the girl obtained a judicial waiver under a Texas law requiring a minor seeking an abortion to get consent from a parent. But staff at the facility where she’s being held refused to take her to her appointments with a doctor to seek an abortion, or let the attorney take her, even though private groups that support abortion rights have raised money for the procedure, Garza said.

Instead, she was taken to a crisis pregnancy center. Such centers encourage pregnant women not to have an abortion.

“I feel like they are trying to coerce me to carry my pregnancy to term,” the girl said in a declaration filed in federal court last week.

The ACLU of Northern California sued HHS last year over what it said was the denial of abortion and contraception to girls in its custody.

Unaccompanied Central American children apprehended at the U.S.-Mexico border are generally turned over to facilities run by private operators on behalf of HHS. Many facilities are affiliated with religious organizations that oppose abortion like the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Nearly 3,000 unaccompanied children were caught by Border Patrol agents at the border in August, the most recent month for which data is available.

U.S. lawyers representing HHS argued that the ACLU’s request for a temporary restraining order allowing an abortion to go forward was wrong on technical grounds, since the original lawsuit argued HHS was violating the First Amendment by allowing religious groups to allegedly refuse access to abortion. In this case, the 17-year-old is not being held in a facility with a religious affiliation, government lawyers said.

It was not immediately known how long the girl would be held at the facility, or whether she would eventually be transferred.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton went further in a separate filing Tuesday. Paxton, who is a strident opponent of abortion rights like most leaders in the nation’s largest conservative state, argued that people in the United States illegally without some type of established ties to the country did not have a “constitutional right to an abortion on demand.”

If the court rules in the girl’s favor, “the ruling will create a right to abortion for anyone on earth who enters the U.S. illegally,” Paxton said in a statement. “And with that right, countless others undoubtedly would follow. Texas must not become a sanctuary state for abortions.”

Paxton was joined in filing the brief by the attorneys general of Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, and South Carolina.

Garza argued the girl’s case “really has nothing to do with her immigration status,” and that she had complied with the state’s abortion laws.

“As far as I’m aware, abortion is legal in this country,” Garza said. “Nobody has the right to force her to have a child against her will.”

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-texas-teen-detainee-abortion-20171010-story.html

The US Health Department is quietly trying to redefine life as beginning at “conception”
Participants at the International Gift of Life Walk, an anti-abortion event in New York City. Rainmaker Photo/MediaPunch

The Department of Health and Human Services is adding language to a draft of its “strategic plan” that echoes language used by anti-abortion activists to stigmatize abortion in the U.S.

A line in the overview section of the new document, first discovered by Politico, states: “HHS accomplishes its mission through programs and initiatives that cover a wide spectrum of activities, serving and protecting Americans at every stage of life, beginning at conception.”

Defining human life as “beginning at conception” has long been a key tenet of anti-abortion platforms, attempting to redefine the termination of any pregnancy as an act of murder.

In 2017 alone, multiple conservative state legislatures have introduced bills that would do everything from forcing a woman seeking an abortion to read anti-abortion literature about life beginning at conception, to redefining the concept of life under state law to make abortion illegal — a measure that has historically been found to be unconstitutional by the courts.

The plan was likely drafted before Tom Price’s departure from his role as Health and Human Services secretary. Price had previously served as a member of Congress with a strongly anti-abortion voting record.

Since Price’s resignation over his extravagant use of private charted flights on taxpayers’ dime, anti-abortion activists have been calling on Trump to choose a replacement that mirrors Price’s views on the issue.

The draft document also goes beyond promoting anti-abortion talking points by incorporating a number of other conservative reproductive care priorities, including repeated references to “faith-based” organizations, a likely nod to the fight over religious freedom exemptions in the Affordable Care Act for things like contraception.

Last week the Trump administration expanded one of those religious liberty exemptions, effectively ending the requirement under the Affordable Care Act that employer-provided health insurance cover contraception.

As Politico noted, the plan also avoids talking about the the specific health needs of certain minority communities, as HHS strategic plans have in the past. Instead, the new plan speaks more generally about “populations at high risk.”

If Trump were to appoint a new secretary of Health and Human Services in the coming month, the department’s overall objectives could be subject to changes. The public will have until Oct. 27 to provide public comment on the new strategic plan before it takes effect.

https://mic.com/articles/185119/the-us-health-department-is-quietly-trying-to-redefine-life-as-beginning-at-conception#.HQ52BcFat

An Oklahoma judge has again overturned a state law restricting women’s access to drug-induced abortions, according to attorneys for the state and for the groups challenging the law.

Oklahoma County District Judge Patricia Parrish on Friday overturned a 2014 state law that banned “off-label” use of medication used for abortions.

“(The) ruling elevates science over politics and ensures Oklahoma women can get the care they need when they have made the decision to end a pregnancy,” said attorney Autumn Katz with the New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights, which filed the lawsuit on behalf of two nonprofit organizations, the Oklahoma Coalition for Reproductive Justice and Nova Health Systems, which operates Reproductive Services.

Parrish had earlier ruled the law was unconstitutional on the grounds that it was special legislation and the state appealed. The state Supreme Court in 2016 overturned that ruling and sent the case back to Parrish, but said the law still could be unconstitutional on other grounds.

Katz said Parrish’s latest ruling, which was not immediately published, noted that the Federal Drug Administration has updated the label for the drug mifepristone, sometimes called RU-486, to include it for use in medical abortions.

Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter and the governor’s office issued statements saying they are disappointed by the judge’s decision.

The law “prevents abortion providers in Oklahoma from using abortion methods that are so dangerous even Planned Parenthood has discontinued the methods,” Hunter, a Republican, said. “We intend to appeal this ruling to the Oklahoma Supreme Court.”

Michael McNutt, a spokesman for Republican Gov. Mary Fallin, also said the drugs pose a potential danger.

“This law would protect women’s health and possibly save lives. We are confident the attorney general’s office will competently challenge (the) ruling,” McNutt said.

Alex Gerszewski, a spokesman for Hunter, said Parrish’s ruling might not be published for weeks.

A similar law in Arkansas is on hold pending a legal challenge.

Under the new FDA label, a smaller dose of mifepristone can be used up to 70 days after the beginning of the last menstrual period instead of the 49-day limit in effect under the old label adopted in 2000. Also, the second drug in the protocol, which follows a day or two later, can be taken by a woman at home and doesn’t have to be administered at a clinic, reducing the number of office visits a woman must make.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/oklahoma-judge-overturns-medical-abortion-restriction-50343233

“Stop trying to deny women their right to live a life of dignity, health, and self-determination.”

In this op-ed, Dr. Willie Parker, Board Chair of Physicians for Reproductive Health, an abortion provider and a Christian, discusses the 20-week abortion ban recently passed by the House of Representatives.

It is not merely a sad day when politicians are willing to outright lie to pass a law; it represents a very dangerous time. On Tuesday, just days after the failure of the latest effort to dismantle the Affordable Care Act, members of the House of Representatives passed the bill that seems to never die: H.R. 36. It was not the House’s first time voting on a version of this medically unnecessary abortion-ban bill. And it passed in the House for the third time.

While H.R. 36 was defeated in 2015 when it came up in the Senate (where it’s headed to next), we cannot dismiss the danger this represents to women and families across our country. The danger I am referring to stems from junk science — in other words, complete and utter lies.

H.R. 36 criminalizes abortion through arbitrary cutoff points. It denies necessary health care to women who are already facing complex circumstances as they seek an abortion later in pregnancy. In addition to shaming and endangering the lives of patients, H.R. 36 imposesextremely harsh criminal penalties (up to five years in jail) on the medical providers who might attempt to give these patients the compassionate care they deserve.

As an obstetrician-gynecologist who provides abortion care and a man of Christian faith, I believe the most important thing you can do for another human being is to help them in their time of need. I wake up every day knowing that I am protecting the sanctity of autonomy and a patient’s right to make a decision about their own health, as well as the heartfelt decision when couples choose to mitigate suffering for their child when a pregnancy prognosis involves intractable suffering at best, and certain death at worst.

The author of H.R. 36, Representative Trent Franks of Arizona, has never been in my position in the examining room, nor will he ever be in the position of a woman who needs an abortion. He is a politician, not any type of medical professional, who is trying to interfere in medical decisions where he does not belong. Representative Franks and the additional 236 members of the House of Representatives who voted to pass this bill represent an attack on the value of a woman’s life and her ability to take control over her life and future.

While I do not claim to be an expert on many issues, I do feel comfortable discussing matters of comprehensive reproductive health care — I have been practicing medicine for more than 20 years, have advanced postgraduate training in this area, and pride myself in the fact that my work is rooted in evidence, facts, and the human stories of the patients I serve.

Representative Franks claims his dangerous bill is rooted in his concern for the safety of women. We know that abortion, no matter when it occurS in pregnancy, is one of the safest medical procedures provided in this country, due in large part to the skill and expertise of abortion providers who offer high-quality care to women. That’s why groups like the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics opposethese types of bills.

Bans on abortion harm the patients that I serve in Alabama and Mississippi, and I would challenge Representative Franks to take the time to get to know some of them. Patients like Tina, who was a lawyer and staff for an elected official on Capitol Hill. With her spouse, she came to me for care, devastated by the diagnosis that their very much desired first pregnancy was lethally flawed by a condition detected at 21 weeks’ gestation. I met them at 24 weeks, as they pursued every test and medical opinion to confirm the diagnosis. When they accepted the diagnosis and decided to spare the child that would be born with such intense suffering and death after birth, as well as to preserve Tina’s fertility by avoiding obstetric complications that could occur with an ongoing pregnancy, I was able to safely and compassionately provide them with the care they needed, though they had the added indignity of lacking insurance coverage for their care because of limits in their federal insurance. A couple of years later, they thanked me and invited me to a dedication service of their healthy firstborn. This would not have been possible if Representative Franks had gotten his way earlier.

Patients like Tina are the common victims of legislation that restricts access to health care. Young women, women of color, low-income women, and immigrant women are disproportionately affected by bills like H.R. 36, which deepen the inequities they face when they try to access care. It’s another barrier for young people, who already often forced to delay their care as they navigate parental consent restrictions depending on which state they live in. I cannot stand idly by while their stories, freedoms, and lives are swept under the rug by politicians who have no place or right to make life-changing decisions for women and their families.

Politicians who truly value the health, well-being, and lives of women should focus on policies that advance healthy pregnancies, reduce maternal mortality, and address the very serious and real needs of women who seek abortion care throughout their pregnancies. The need for abortion care will not disappear even if it is criminalized.

We must let our elected representatives know that we cannot stand for this attack on access to comprehensive, affordable, and compassionate reproductive health care. Stop trying to deny women of their right to live a life of dignity, health, and self-determination.

https://www.teenvogue.com/story/abortion-ban-dr-willie-parker#intcid=dt-recirc-cral2_1

As street tensions increase, pro-choice group says a London council must curb ‘harassment’ of women at Marie Stopes clinic

Police Officers Removing Abortion Rights Demonstrators
 Police officers tackle a crowd of pro-choice abortion rights activists in New York. Photograph: Viviane Moos/Corbis via Getty Images

A London council will decide on Tuesday whether to pursue a public space protection order to prevent the harassment and intimidation of women accessing abortion services at the Marie Stopes clinic in Ealing, west London.

In the first case of its kind, Ealing council will debate the move after a petition from local pro-choice group, Sister Supporter, which demanded action to stop anti-abortion protesters holding vigils six days a week outside the clinic and approaching patients.

The protection orders, which replace asbos and are more commonly used to stop antisocial behaviour such as public drug-taking and drinking, make it possible to prosecute predefined activities within a geographical area. They have never been used in connection with abortion clinics.

“We’re hoping Ealing sets a precedent to stop the growing harassment of women using abortion services. What happens here could start a domino effect for other councils to follow,” said Anna Veglio-White, spokesperson for Sister Supporter.

The debate comes amid rising concern over increasing anti-abortion demonstrations around Britain, some of which have taken on a ferocity more usually associated with the US.

John Hansen-Brevetti, clinical operations manager at the Ealing centre, said other Marie Stopes clinics had reported an increase in protests and a more aggressive tone, prompting calls for new legislation. Anti-harassment laws are insufficient for this new mood, say pro-choice campaigners.

Anyone passing the Ealing clinic routinely sees large photos of foetuses on the pavement near the entrance, where one anti-abortion demonstrator hands leaflets to patients while a group stands nearby. The anti-abortion Good Counsel Network has reportedly also handed out plastic foetuses and testimonies collected by Sister Supporter include reports of women’s approaches to the clinic being streamed on Facebook Live.

The council meeting on Tuesday is the culmination of months of standoffs outside the clinic between the anti-abortion group and Sister Supporter, which has grown to 500 members since it was founded 18 months ago. Every week a large group of supporters, clad in pink hi-vis vests, form a picket line in an effort to block anti-abortion demonstrators approaching patients.

Clare McCullough, centre manager of the Good Counsel Network, which also holds vigils outside two other Marie Stopes clinics, claimed her group had to request a police presence on Saturdays to stop “intimidation by Sister Supporter”, whose members she accused of “seeking to foment violence”.

The network was set up by a group of Roman Catholics but is not now church-affiliated, she said.

“We’ve been holding vigils in Ealing for 23 years and no one has ever been charged with harassment,” said McCullough, adding that if the protection order was introduced, “we will continue to do what we do, just further down the road”.

Pro-choice campaigners
Pinterest
 Pro-choice campaigners from Sister Supporter outside the Marie Stopes abortion clinic in Ealing, London.

But for Veglio-White, the increasing hostility of the protesters was a concern. “Local people were saying there should be a counter-demonstration. Unless there is a clinic near them, people don’t see how aggressive the pro-life movement in the UK is becoming.”

Hansen-Brevetti said the harassment had crossed a line into endangering women’s safety. “What people don’t know is that they face this when they leave the clinic too. We’ve done everything we can to get them in a better place physically and emotionally and then they are hounded down the road as they leave.”

He backs the motion to be debated, which states that it is explicitly not in favour of or against abortion but seeks to stop the intimidation of women.

The campaign to stop the anti-abortion protests has been backed by Dr Rupa Huq, Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton, who has raised the issue in the Commons. She said: “The people who frustrate the rights of women accessing NHS-provided services and obstruct the pavement in the name of religion using moral blackmail are bullies of the worst kind that need stopping in their tracks.

“The council route is great but, in the meantime, as part of a wider strategy to address deficiencies in existing public order legislation that see the police hamstrung all over the country … I am working with BPAS [British Pregnancy Advisory Service] to amend forthcoming domestic violence legislation in order that a cordon sanitaire can be introduced around these facilities, so that women can use their services, free from harassment.”

One clinic worker, who did not want to give her name, said the anti-abortion protesters could be heard inside the building, and distressed patients had begged staff to stop the vigils. The disruption has also drawn complaints from residents.

Jodie Vickery, whose flat is opposite the clinic, said: “I have had the church group follow me into the park preaching at me quite forcefully and their presence makes residents feel uncomfortable. It’s also a waste of police time.”

Siobhan Appleton, who passes the clinic on the way to work, said the protests had raised difficult discussions with her children. “These vigils put you in the position of having to explain to your kids why these people are there. A discussion on the merits or otherwise of our abortion laws is one I’d like to have with my kids when they are ready – not because of this group.”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/07/us-abortion-uk-intimidation-london-marie-stopes

Trump’s latest birth control rollbacks seem like a victory for the religious right. But why?

 

Birth control has not historically been an evangelical issue Shutterstock

The Trump administration announced Friday that it would roll back the Affordable Care Act’s mandate that employers cover workers’ birth control. During the Obama administration, the initial wave of companies granted an exemption from the rule argued that paying into a plan that covered birth control would violate their religious beliefs. But the new normal in American health care looks to be a victory for the religious right, particularly evangelicals, the only religious group in which a majority opposed the mandate, according to a 2012 Public Religion Research Institute poll.

Hours later, the Christian advocacy group My Faith Votes, whose founding honorary chair is Housing and Urban Development Secretary Dr. Ben Carson, released a statement praising Trump’s decision, saying, “The Affordable Care Act mandate forced countless business owners to pay for abortion drugs and contraceptives, even if doing so went directly against their deeply held religious beliefs or moral convictions.”

Yet among evangelical Protestants, at least, birth control — and who has access to it — has only recently become a major political issue. Unlike Catholics, whose catechism denounces use of most forms of contraception as a sin, evangelical Protestants by and large do not. (Because of the disparate nature of evangelical Protestantism, which includes hundreds if not thousands of separate denominations, it’s difficult to speak of a “formal stance” in the way we can of Catholics.) But alongside Catholic organizations like Little Sisters of the Poor, it’s evangelical-led companies like Hobby Lobby that have been on the forefront of opposition to the ACA birth control mandate.

In this, the evangelical stance on the ACA birth control mandate reflects a wider issue: the increased convergence of Catholics and evangelical Protestants — hardly historical allies — on social issues in the past few decades, as issues like the same-sex marriage debate and abortion have united the two socially conservative groups. As David Talcott, professor of philosophy at King’s College and an expert in Christian sexual ethics, told Vox, “Catholic and conservative evangelicals have become allies of certain kinds,” each defending the interests of other, as theological and philosophical overlap between the two.

Recent research supports the idea of overlap between traditional Catholic and Protestant thought. Earlier this fall, a Pew Research Center study found that average Protestants more often than not assert traditionally Catholic teachings about, among other things, the nature of salvation or the role of church teaching, reflecting a cultural crossover — however unconscious — between the two groups.

In contrast to the Catholic stance, the current set of evangelical objections to the ACA birth control mandate have less to do with any formal doctrine about birth control per se than they do about wider cultural issues, including the abortion debate, the aftermath of the sexual revolution, and precedents for religious exemptions more generally.

Hobby Lobby and similar groups object to the use of birth control that could be considered abortifacients, not birth control itself

When Hobby Lobby filed its 2012 lawsuit objecting to the mandate on religious grounds — with the Supreme Court ultimately ruling in its favor — it didn’t do so because of a general objection to birth control. Rather, it did so because certain forms of birth control, including Plan B, also known as the “morning after pill,” could be considered an abortifacient because it prevents implantation of an already fertilized egg. Hobby Lobby founder David Green wrote in a 2012 op-ed for USA Today: “Being Christians, we don’t pay for drugs that might cause abortions. Which means that we don’t cover emergency contraception, the morning-after pill or the week-after pill. We believe doing so might end a life after the moment of conception, something that is contrary to our most important beliefs.”

The extent to which this line of reasoning applies to other forms of contraception has been a subject of debate among evangelicals, particularly in regard to the pill, which critics have argued — often in the absence of conclusive scientific evidence — may prevent the implantation of an already-fertilized egg. But these are often academic arguments — confined to scholars or pastors at conferences — rather than ones that apply to the average evangelical Christian’s lived experience.

As Talcott put it: “Most evangelicals accept [contraception]. If you go ask any evangelical or evangelical pastor, they’ll say if a married couple wants to use contraception or use the pill, then that’s fine. It hasn’t really been a moral issue within evangelicalism … if you ask random evangelicals, whatever, they’re going to use the Pill and not think about it.”

The evangelical right’s anti-abortion stance is more recent than you’d think

Meanwhile, despite the evangelical right’s current commitment to anti-abortion policies, this was not always the case. As late as the 1960s, abortion seems to have been a debated issue among the Christian right. According to an excellent article by Rob Shryock at Salon, a 1968 document produced at a conference co-sponsored by Christianity Today and the Christian Dental and Medical Association treated the question as unresolved: “Whether the performance of an induced abortion is sinful we are not agreed, but about the necessity of it and permissibility for it under certain circumstances we are in accord. … When principles conflict, the preservation of fetal life … may have to be abandoned to maintain full and secure family life.”

But amid the culture wars of the late 1970s and the ’80s, evangelicals disillusioned by Jimmy Carter’s first term used the 1973 Supreme Court decision for Roe v. Wade as a rallying cry for conservative Christians to deny him another one. Evangelical Protestants joined their Catholic brethren — whose position against abortion and contraception had long been more established — in understanding life to begin at conception.

It’s worth noting that not all evangelicals support Trump’s wider efforts to court the religious right through similar “religious freedom” initiatives. On Friday, the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty released a statement to journalists criticizing Trump’s Department of Justice memo on religious liberty, released the same day as the birth control decision, which focused in part on religiously-motivated business’s rights: “The [new] guidance treats complicated legal issues, such as the definition of ‘substantial burden’ on religious exercise and the interplay between religious autonomy and government funding, in an overly simplistic way.” This reflects the committee’s general wariness toward the conflation of government and religion. The same group filed an amicus brief in this summer’s Trinity Lutheran v. Comer court decision, over state-level funding for a church playground, arguing against the potential for setting a precedent for “coercive government” interfering in individual religious affairs.

Some evangelical attitudes toward birth control reflect wider attitudes toward the sexual revolution

While, for most evangelicals, birth control (within a heterosexual marriage) is a non-issue, some cultural changes among evangelical Protestants have politicized contraception.

“There are a lot of people who think that the social and cultural changes of the past 50 years especially related to sex have been pretty bad,” Talcott told me, “the whole process by which we find partners, get married. I think both men and women find it unsatisfying for the most part.” While he cautioned that such evangelicals did not represent the mainstream, he noted that for some, the widespread availability of contraception contributed to their uneasiness with the sexual revolution more generally.

Talcott noted that objection to birth control among evangelicals had been more prevalent prior to the developments of the 20th century. Christians disenchanted by the outcomes of the sexual revolution, he said, might find themselves “attracted to the older view, the historic forms of marriage and Christianity and trying to see what resources are maybe there for trying to help us figure out what to do today in this sort of Wild West of Christianity. … The marriage debate, transgender issues, are [all] forcing on the conservative wing evangelicals to think about what marriage is, and how birth control can fit into that.”

For those evangelicals, birth control — particularly the Pill — represents the worst excesses of the sexual revolution: a change in mentality from one that venerated reproduction and family life to one that focused on the individual’s (and, particularly, the individual woman’s) right to transcend their personal biology in pursuit of personal or sexual fulfillment. As Agnieszka Tennant, writing about her disillusionment with the Pill in Christianity Today, puts it: “Could Mircette have changed not just the hormonal makeup of my cells, but also what cannot be seen under a microscope? Could it have served as one more safety lock on the door not just to my womb, but also to my figure, my marriage, my home, my career, my gym routine?”

Likewise, evangelical couples like Sam and Bethany Torode published books like 2002’s Open Embrace: A Protestant Couple Rethinks Contraception, which argued that taking medical steps to delay childbearing went against God’s plan for creation and contributed to an ethos of selfishness (the two ultimately divorced after nine years and four children, retracting their position on contraception and leaving the evangelical church).

A 2015 article in Al Jazeera profiled a number of evangelical Christians who took this stance, including Andrew Walker, director of policy studies at the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, who said, “The idea of talking about children as a ‘scare’ and viewing them as an obstacle to the American dream, that’s not a Christian way of looking at family. … That’s what I like to tell young couples: The family is actually a pretty adaptable institution. It doesn’t necessarily have to put a brake on your life.”

For some evangelicals, furthermore, birth control is synonymous not just with the sexual revolution but with feminism more generally. In 2001’s Lies Women Believe, a popular evangelical book by Christian radio host Nancy Leigh DeMoss, treats contraception as indicative of a much more insidious feminist mindset, coding it as a diabolical celebration of female selfishness that leads “to the legitimization and promotion of such practices as contraception, sterilization, and family planning. As a result, unwittingly, millions of Christian women and couples have helped further Satan’s attempts to limit human reproduction and thereby destroy life.”

This perspective reached its apex with fringe movements like “Quiverfull,” whose best-known representatives, the Duggars, rose to reality TV fame. This movement mandated that good Christian families devote themselves entirely to raising as many children as possible in the faith.

Evangelical suspicion of Obama more generally intensified this trend, as the debate over the ACA combined two different hot-button questions: Is birth control acceptable and what should the government pay for? A distrust of government intervention — particularly that of the government of a “liberal” president — as well as a desire to solidify the evangelical stance on religious exceptions more generally, made the ACA birth control mandate an ideal political weathervane.

As Ron Henzel, an evangelical pastor at Midwest Christian Outreach, told me, “If there are any [evangelical] moral objections to subsidizing contraception, they’re generally not based on the notion that birth control … is evil, but rather on the more ideological question of what the government should or should not be paying for. Is birth control a legitimate form of health care, and is it the role of government to pay for it? … Here is where evangelicals who do not have a problem with contraception are now broadly sympathetic with Roman Catholics who oppose it. … We don’t want to see anyone being forced by the government to compromise their religious views, even when we disagree with their religious views.”

But that will make little difference to the women working for these employers if — or when — they are denied the coverage they need.

https://www.vox.com/identities/2017/10/7/16259952/birth-control-evangelical-agenda

Women read from the Bible at El Salvador's Ilopango prison, which teaches inmates skills such as knitting, piata-making, painting, dancing, aerobics, reading, and cosmetology, among others.

Story highlights

  • Alice Driver: Passage of a recent bill in the House of Representatives shows that for some Republicans, criminalizing abortion is a priority
  • If Americans want to know what women’s lives are like in a country where abortion is a crime, they should listen to women in El Salvador, she writes

Alice Driver is a freelance journalist and translator whose work focuses on migration, human rights, and gender equality. She is currently based in Mexico City. Driver is the author of “More or Less Dead: Feminicide, Haunting, and the Ethics of Representation in Mexico.” The views expressed this commentary are solely the author’s.

(CNN)During his presidential campaign, Donald Trump famously said that there should be “some form of punishment” for abortion. Although he later tried to walk these remarks back, he and his mostly male fellow Republicans have quietly been making headway since he took office on an agenda to make sure women have as few options as possible for reproductive choice and education, including limited access to birth control and the preventative care offered by Planned Parenthood.

This week, the House of Representatives passed the “Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act,” a bill criminalizing abortions after 20 weeks. The White House, through a statement of administration policy released on Monday night, backed the measure, meaning President Trump plans to sign it if it passes the Senate. Courts have recently struck down similar bans for violating Roe v. Wade and other rulings about abortion. In 2014, for instance, the Supreme Court declined to hear the case on Arizona’s 20-week ban, letting stand a ruling from the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which said Arizona’s law violated multiple Supreme Court rulings, including Roe v. Wade.
In July, the Trump administration proposed a cut of $213.6 million from teen pregnancy prevention programs and research, even though those programs have been proven to decrease unwanted pregnancies and abortion.
If Americans want to know what the lives of women are like in a country where abortion and even miscarriage have criminal penalties, they should listen to women in El Salvador, where I have been reporting for a project on women in prison.
In El Salvador, abortion is illegal, with no exceptions for rape, incest or the life of the mother. Often, women who are poor are charged with aggravated homicide even in cases of miscarriage. To put the situation of sexual and reproductive rights in El Salvador in context, it has one of the highest rates of teen pregnancy in Latin America, where, as a health official told Reuters in 2016, more than a third of all pregnancies occurred among girls aged 10 to 19. Nearly two in every five pregnancies among girls in El Salvador aged 10 to 12 are the result of rape and incest but the rapists often go unpunished, according to the UN Population Fund. Since 1998, at least 150 women have been prosecuted under El Salvador’s abortion ban.
In 2013, the case of 22-year-old “Beatriz” reached the Supreme Court in El Salvador. Due to various medical conditions, her pregnancy put her life in danger, and she wanted to have an abortion. The court ruled against her and she was forced to carry the fetus, which was delivered via C-section and lived for five hours.
At 20 years old, Adriana, from San Salvador, El Salvador, gave birth at home alone to a child that wasn’t breathing. Adriana requested that her name be changed for her safety. “My body was shaking. It was midnight. There was no transportation,” she described. By the time she made it to the hospital, Adriana said that the staff — rather than providing her with medical attention — accused her of homicide and called the police. She was sent to Ilopango Women’s Prison where she spent five months while her case went to court. The judge charged her with aggravated homicide and gave her the maximum sentence — 30 years.
According to María Rosa Cruz, 50, a psychologist in San Salvador who has worked to help women imprisoned for abortion to adjust to life after prison, in El Salvador “there is a hospital to prison pipeline” for poor women who suffer miscarriages. “Basically, these are poor, young women who have never been taught their sexual and reproductive rights, and many of them are victims of abuse — you won’t see any rich women in prison,” explained Rosa Cruz.
Educating people about women’s bodily autonomy in a country where abortion is a crime is a battle some women have been fighting for decades in El Salvador. Morena Herrera is the founder and president of the Citizen’s Group for the Decriminalization of Abortion in San Salvador, and is all too familiar with cases like that of Adriana. Herrera helped fight for the rights of a group of women known as “Las 17” who were sentenced to up to 30 years in jail following reported miscarriages between 1999 and 2011. As she describes, “The problem is that abortion isn’t understood as a human rights, public health or social justice issue.”
She talked about the psychological damage caused by obligating a woman to have a child after rape or sexual violence or when the child is dead or deformed. “I know women who have children who are the result of rape,” she said. “I remember a friend telling me, ‘I saw my baby breast feed, and I promised I would transmit only love and not the hate of my rapist in my veins, but there are times when her gestures or her expressions are like his, and I can’t deal with it.'”
As recently as this past July, El Salvador enforced a law that made it possible for rapists to marry the underage girls that they had raped. For example, in 2017 a 12-old-girl who was raped by a 34-year-old was later forced to marry him, and the case was covered widely in the media because many women’s rights organizations were galvanizing efforts to end the law.
Iris Liseth Campos Reyes, 29, who describes herself as a feminist, has spent nine years as a social justice organizer in San Salvador, including the past two working with Youth Voices for Reproductive Choice. She has a personal connection to the injustice of the way rape victims were treated. She explained, “At 14 my mother was raped by a 64-year-old neighbor. She was raped over a period of years,” and gave birth to four of her siblings as a result. “This law makes me think of my mom.” Reyes, who has a nine-year-old daughter of her own, says she is inspired by her daughter to work in poor communities to teach women about their sexual and reproductive rights.
Suggesting that women be punished for having abortions isn’t the only risky similarity to observe between the United States and El Salvador. In March Oklahoma state Rep. George Faughtclaimed that rape and incest were part of God’s will. In addition, in 2017 Republican legislators in Missouri proposed a bill to provide religious liberty protections for crisis pregnancy centers which often open next to abortion clinics and try to convince women not to have abortions.
This type of religious rhetoric is also employed in El Salvador, where the church plays a strong role in government decisions. Anti-abortion signs and slogans in the streets of San Salvador, often featuring religious symbols like rosaries, read, “It’s not your body — it’s your child” or show a photo of a baby that reads, “My life is in your hands.” In fact, as Amnesty International outlines in the report “On the Brink of Death: Violence Against Women and the Prohibition of Abortion in El Salvador,” it was a campaign on the part of the Catholic Church that produced the 1998 law making abortion illegal with no exceptions.
As women in the US face a reality in which they have fewer and fewer reproductive choices, in which teen pregnancy prevention programs are cut, birth control is not covered by insurance, and abortion is technically legal but not available in many areas due to the closure of clinics — the situation in El Salvador provides an example of what we could look forward to if Republicans achieve their long-held goal of reversing Roe v. Wade. When I visited Ilopango Women’s Prison, where women young and old have been jailed for decades for abortion, I looked at their faces and thought of the friends and family I know, including my own mother, who have had abortions. According to Ministry of Health data cited by Amnesty International, between 2005 and 2008 there were 19,290 abortions, of which 11% resulted in the death of the mother.
I imagined how their different their lives — and mine — would have been if they had spent them in jail.

As the country prepares to hold a referendum on abortion, religiously-motivated opposition to it may be on the wane.

Pro-choice advocates protest in favor of more liberal Irish abortion laws in Dublin, Ireland on September 30, 2017. 
Pro-choice advocates protest in favor of more liberal Irish abortion laws in Dublin, Ireland on September 30, 2017. Clodagh Kilcoyne / Reuters

Tens of thousands of people gathered in Dublin Saturday for the annual March for Choice, a demonstration calling on Ireland’s government to ease its near-total abortion ban. It was the first major rally organized by pro-choice advocates since the government announced an upcoming referendum: Next summer, the country will vote on whether it should change its abortion laws. The advocates told me that if the referendum works out in their favor, they may not have to organize any more marches.

But it’s not yet clear how likely the laws are to change, or even what changes will be proposed. The exact wording of the vote is not expected to be determined before December.Leo Varadkar, Ireland’s Taoiseach, or prime minister, said the referendum would consider whether the country should amend its constitution, which, under its Eighth Amendment, gives an unborn child equal right to life to that of a pregnant woman. Though the amendment effectively outlaws abortion in all cases, a law passed in 2013 put into effect new rules allowing for abortion if the pregnancy poses a risk to the woman’s life because she is physically ill or suicidal. Unlike most other European countries, Ireland does not allow abortion in the case of rape, incest, or severe or fatal fetal abnormality. But women are permitted to travel to other countries, like the United Kingdom, to access abortion services—without facing prosecution when they return home.

Pro-choice advocates like Clare Lanigan believe Ireland’s laws are far too restrictive. A member of the Abortion Rights Campaign and one of the organizers behind Saturday’s march, she wants the referendum to address repealing the Eighth Amendment. But Lanigan told me that outright repeal may not be what the government has in mind. “It’s not yet clear what will be on the ballot,” she said. “We’re reserving judgment until we see what exactly is proposed, because if it’s only going to allow abortion in extremely restrictive cases … it won’t help the majority of people in Ireland who need abortions.”Anti-abortion activists in Ireland have advocated that the Eighth Amendment stand as is, arguing that any attempt to repeal it, partially or fully, would be a mistake. “Once you start changing the Eighth Amendment at all—if you start removing any part of it or changing any of the words—you are interfering with the right to life of a baby in the mother’s womb,” Cora Sherlock, a spokeswoman for the Pro Life Campaign, a non-denominational anti-abortion group, told me. “Over time it would lead us to a situation where we would have abortion on wide-ranging grounds. That is what has happened in every other country in the world, and there is no reason to think that Ireland would be any different.”

Ireland’s decision to hold a referendum comes months after a report was issued by the Citizens’ Assembly, a 99-member group appointed by the government to advise it on some of the country’s most divisive issues. After five months of deliberation, the group issued its recommendations calling for unrestricted abortion access. But it’s unclear to what extent the government will adopt the Assembly’s recommendations when it drafts the referendum. Several ministers within the ruling center-right Fine Gael party said they don’t think the recommendations would pass muster in the country’s parliament, let alone in a public referendum. This is presumed in part because abortion has long been taboo among the country’s Roman Catholic majority.

But opposition to abortion, particularly on religious grounds, may be waning, Emer O’Toole, a writer and professor of Irish studies at Concordia University, told me. “There is no doubt that Ireland’s Catholic history and the strength of the Catholic Church in Ireland right now has an influence on our relationship to things like women’s reproductive rights,” she said. “However, when people think about why they are opposed to abortion, I don’t think their minds go to ‘because the priest said so’ anymore.”Sherlock said that some oppose abortion on religious grounds, but that certainly isn’t the sole reason. “Generally what we find in Ireland more and more is that people are coming from the position that they want to keep the Eighth Amendment because they are aware of personal stories, because they know there are people out there who are alive because of the Eighth Amendment,” she said, adding that “abortion isn’t something that’s normalized in Ireland. Because we don’t have abortion clinics here, people have a bit of time to assess what that means for them.”

Ireland remains a predominantly Catholic country. Although a 2016 census found that the total number of people identifying as Catholic fell by 132,200 between 2011 and 2016 (a decline that corresponds with the rise in those who identify as having no religion), an overwhelming 78.3 percent still identifies with the Church. But the extent to which the religion’s beliefs and practices govern Irish society has, over the years, undergone a gradual shift—one that some attribute to the weakening of the Church’s status following revelations of clerical child abuse in the 1990s. This shift was marked by a number of other milestones regarded as proof of Ireland’s mounting progressivism, from its 2015 referendum legalizing same-sex marriagein 2015, to the election of Varadkar, the county’s first openly gay premier, in June.

“For a lot of people, myself included, there was a great sense of hope after the marriage-equality referendum passed that finally the Eighth Amendment could be addressed head-on,” Lanigan said. “There’s definitely a sense that with progress comes other progress. … The vast majority of the Irish population voted for it, even though the majority of the Irish population still identifies as Catholic, so that shows that being Catholic and being progressive are not mutually exclusive.”

Indeed, a March survey conducted by the Irish Times and pollster Ipsos MRBI found that an overwhelming majority of Irish people believe the country’s constitutional ban needs reform to account for certain circumstances, though they still reject the idea of legalizing abortion outright. Twenty-eight percent of those surveyed said the Eighth Amendment should repealed, wheres 38 percent said it should instead be replaced with another amendment allowing for greater access. Sixteen percent said it should not be repealed at all.Ailbhe Smyth, a co-founder and chair of the Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment, told me pro-choice advocates regard repealing the amendment as the “crucial first step” to reforming abortion access in Ireland, noting that a failure to do so would force women to seek abortions by illegal means or by leaving the country—an option some 5,000 women avail themselves of every year. “What we actually say to women is, ‘Abortion is wrong, thou shalt not have an abortion because it’s a crime. However, we don’t mind if you go to some other country and have an abortion, and you can come back to Ireland and we won’t prosecute you for that,” Smyth said. “We can pretend it doesn’t happen here, but it does. It’s just that we outsource the doing to another country.”

She added: “We are really living in what can only be called a state of dishonesty. People say it’s hypocritical, but it’s a little bit worse than that.”

I raised this point with Sherlock, who told me the Pro Life Campaign is opposed to “abortion anywhere,” adding that: “We’re not trying to stop anyone from traveling. That’s not something we’re doing in Ireland. … Just because something that we don’t agree with in this country is legal elsewhere is not a reason for us to do it here.”Despite the changes in public opinion over the years, O’Toole, the Concordia professor, said the longstanding Irish taboo against abortion shouldn’t be underestimated. “The reality at this point is that the vast majority of people in Ireland support some change to our current abortion regime … but they don’t support the idea that women should be able to have an abortion on request, even in the first trimester of pregnancy,” she said, adding that much of this sentiment is informed by the abortion education taught in schools, the vast majority of which are run by the Catholic Church. “I wasn’t pro-choice on leaving school, because I couldn’t have been. There’s no way you could have left my secondary school in the west of Ireland and been pro-choice.”

Though the outcome of the referendum will depend on what the government ultimately decides to put on the ballot—repeal versus reform, legalization versus increased access—Smyth said she’s optimistic. “I’ve been involved since the end of the 1970s and … I’ve never seen such a big and wide and deep social movement here for change on this issue,” she said. “I wouldn’t be doing this if I didn’t believe we can win this, and we can win this. Whether we will or not is another day’s work.”

https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/10/ireland-abortion-referendum/541527/