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NEWS
Thousands March for Reproductive Rights, Washington DC
By Allison Stevens, WeNews correspondent
26 April 2004 **********************************
More than one million pro-choice activists converged in
Washington DC, the US capital on Sunday, April 25, to protest the US
government's persistent effort to chip away at women's reproductive and
health rights. For more information about the March for Women's Lives, go
to http://www.plannedparenthood.com/march/] --Mods
WASHINGTON (WOMENSENEWS)--More than one million
pro-choice activists converged in the nation's capital Sunday to protest
the government's persistent effort to chip away at women's reproductive
and health rights.
The March for Women's Lives--organized by a coalition of
activist organizations--easily broke attendance records for national
reproductive-rights rallies, overwhelming the 750,000 benchmark set in
1992.
After a two-mile walk from the Washington monument down
Pennsylvania past the White House and toward the U.S. Capitol Building,
demonstrators returned to their starting point on the national mall for a
four-hour late-afternoon rally led by a diverse group of women's rights
leaders and entertainment-world celebrities.
Brandishing a white coat hanger, comedian Whoopi
Goldberg kicked off the afternoon rally with a vow to never to return to
the days of back-alley abortions that prevailed before the Supreme Court
legalized abortion in 1973.
"This was the choice," Goldberg said as she held up the
hanger. "This was it. And I'm here to tell you, never again. We are not
going backwards child, never again."
A sea of faces stretched more than a mile, from one end
of the national mall to the other. Under an overcast sky, the dozens of
lawmakers, celebrities and political organizers looked out at them and
issued a collective call to restore and preserve women's health and
reproductive rights.
Delivering a Political Warning
While avoiding partisan politics, one speaker after the
next warned that the anti-choice leaders who control the White House and
Congress will pay a political price in this fall's elections for
restricting the access of women in the United States and around the globe
to abortion and reproductive health services. They portrayed the Bush
administration's anti-abortion and abstinence-only policies as steps
toward an ultimate goal of outlawing abortion and dramatically reducing
the availability of contraception.
Speakers included House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a
California Democrat who is the highest ranking elected official in U.S.
history; former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; and feminist
leaders from the past, present and future including Gloria Steinem, who
founded the National Organization for Women, Kate Michelman, who will step
down from the helm of NARAL Pro-Choice America at the end of the year, and
Carrie Sietstra, executive director and founder of Law Students for
Choice. Speakers representing the African American, Hispanic and gay and
lesbian communities also addressed the crowd.
At the morning rally before the walk, New York Senator
Hillary Clinton received a rousing welcome as participants assembled on
the national mall before the walk, which began at 1 p.m. Saying that the
last national reproductive rights march in 1992 had ushered in the
election of a pro-choice president, Clinton called for all assembled to
register and vote in the fall election; a major message of the event. "To
support individual freedom and oppose the threats to individual rights,
abortion is a question of conscience," she said.
The delegation of pro-choice Republicans was 500-strong
with representatives from 12 states. Jennifer Blei Stockman, head of the
Republican Pro-Choice Coalition, said that her members were marching
because they oppose government's intrusion into individual lives and are
deeply concerned by recent actions by Congress and White House that
attacked women's right to chose.
"We support our party on many traditional issues," Stockman said, "but we
do not agree with the recent actions that limit personal freedom." It was
a reference to what many demonstrators here consider an intensifying and
frontal attack on abortion rights since 2002, when an anti-choice White
House and Congress began using legislation, judicial appointments and
executive fiat to roll back the clock on abortion rights.
November Abortion Ban
Last November, Bush signed a law criminalizing "partial
birth" abortions, a term criticized for being so clinically vague that it
leaves women and doctors open to prosecution for any procedure occurring
after the 12th week of pregnancy. The law includes an exception to
preserve the life of the mother but not her health. It is the first
federal statute to restrict abortion since the 1973 Roe v. Wade Supreme
Court decision giving women the legal right to abortion. Now being
appealed by a number of pro-choice organizations, the partial-birth law is
currently blocked from enforcement by a federal court injunction.
In April, Bush signed the Unborn Victims of Crime Act, a federal law that
confers legal status to fetuses injured by crimes against pregnant women.
Pro-choice activists worry that by granting embryos and fetuses full human
rights it may create a precedent for those seeking to overturn Roe v.
Wade. They also say the law may be used to prosecute pregnant women for
either drug or alcohol abuse.
The demonstration was officially opened in the morning by the soprano
Margie Adam singing "We shall go forth," the spiritual she had written for
the abortion-rights march 25 years ago. By the time she sang, the
1.5-mile-long mall was filled with women, men and even nursing babies
wearing the bright pink T-shirts identifying them with the demonstration
and listening to a virtual Who's Who of the women's movement.
Speakers' messages throughout the day resonated with the calm crowd
representing a U.S. cross-section and including leaders from more than 50
countries. More than one-third of the mostly female crowd was college age
or younger and many speakers pointed that out and said it belied the
conventional wisdom that young people were politically apathetic. A
contingent of anti-globalization activists in town to protest the spring
meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank also joined the
march.
"I'm marching because I'm showing my people we do have a choice, said
Melinda Garcia, a 26-year-old mother from Massachusetts who said her main
reasons for attending the march were political. "If you let Bush win, he's
going to take all choices away," she said. "He won't stop."
Precious Nthanga, a 23-year-old woman who works with Planned Parenthood in
Zambia, agreed. "It's the women from the United States who helped liberate
the women from Africa," she said. "If the women from the United States
lose their rights, we will be doomed, because there will be no one to
stand up for us."
Dispensing Morning-After Prescriptions
In what they called an act of civil disobedience, a
group of physicians stood near the beginning of the march dispensing
prescriptions to those who asked for morning-after pills. Dr. Kaneen Geer,
from the Institute for Urban Family Health in New York City, said that 15
physicians had joined the action and by the midpoint of the walk she had
dispensed more than 150 prescriptions. "It has 12 refills," she told one
recipient. "We want it to be over-the-counter, so please give them to your
friends." The surprised-looking woman quickly agreed.
A contingent of anti-choice protesters also took the opportunity to air
their views on what they called a "Death March." Randall Terry, head of
the anti-choice group called Operation Witness, said more than 1,000
members of his movement participated. Members of Silent No More Awareness
Campaign, with offices in the Northeast, held signs saying "I Regret My
Abortion" and "I Regret Lost Fatherhood." Police reported that 16
activists were arrested for demonstrating without a permit.
The march on Washington--a rich symbol of the power of the people's power
over their government--is taking place at a critical time for reproductive
rights, organizers said.
"The reason for this march is really to sound the alarm that our policies
both globally and domestically are hurting women," said Eleanor Smeal,
president of the Feminist Majority Foundation, a Northern Virginia-based
group helping to organize event. "A large portion of our population does
not know the terrible impact of our policies."
Smeal insisted that the message of the march is not an "electoral one."
Rather, she said, it is intended to send a message to leaders of both
parties at all levels of government. More generally, Smeal said she hopes
it will serve as a wake-up call to a public that may not be aware of
recent efforts to undermine women's rights.
High Stakes Politically
Nonetheless, pro-choice activists routinely acknowledge
that a lot is at stake in this year's elections. If Bush wins reelection
this fall, he will likely appoint a successor to at least one of the five
Supreme Court justices who support abortion rights. If Republicans retain
Senate control, that nominee could lead to the repeal of Roe v. Wade, the
1973 Supreme Court case that guaranteed women the right to decide--free
from government interference--whether to end a pregnancy.
Although focused on defending a woman's right to choose from any further
restrictions, demonstrators were also rallying around other issues:
justice and equality for women in all socio-economic strata around the
world; access for all women to the full range of contraceptive services
and family planning options; the need for better health services for women
of all races, incomes and ages; and the effect of the federal government's
foreign and policies on women worldwide.
Smeal, the former head of the Washington, D.C.-based National Organization
for Women, oversaw the first national march for abortion rights nearly two
decades ago. Unlike that 1986 march, organized by one group and focused
exclusively on the rights of U.S. women, this year's event is being led by
seven activist groups addressing health and reproductive issues on a
global scale.
They are the National Organization for Women, NARAL Pro-Choice America,
the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the Feminist Majority
Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Black Women's Health
Imperative, and the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health.
Some 1,400 groups--focused on everything from civil rights, religion,
healthcare, feminism and the environment also helped organize and lead the
event.
"This march is an opportunity to express solidarity among women both in
the United States and globally to say 'No more!' to these policies that
hurt women here and abroad," said June Zeitlin, executive director of the
New York-based Women's Environment and Development Organization. "The
women's movement is a global movement. We really want women here to
understand the linkages" with their peers overseas.
Attacking the 'Global Gag' Rule
Most prominent among these is the Mexico City policy, or
the so-called global gag rule. It bars U.S. family-planning assistance to
any foreign health care agency that uses funds from any source to perform
abortions, provide counseling and referral for abortion or lobby to make
abortion legal or more available in their country. To receive U.S.
funding, the agencies may perform abortions only when there is a threat to
the woman's life or the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest.
Announced by the Reagan administration, the ban was lifted by President
Bill Clinton on his first day in office. Bush reinstated it on his first
day in office, Jan. 22, 2001.
Republicans don't seem too worried about the message delivered by the
marchers. Christine Iverson, a spokeswoman for the Republican National
Committee, doubts the event will threaten Bush's bid for reelection. And
even though the event may energize the liberal base of voters, she
suggested that voters are more concerned about issues such as the economy
national security.
Officials from the Bush campaign did not return calls for comment. But
Vice President Dick Cheney said that abortion was a top priority for the
Bush administration on Tuesday night during an awards dinner for the
National Right to Life Committee, which he reportedly hailed as "a great
movement of conscience."
Before the last national reproductive rights march in 1992, NOW had
organized three others: two in 1989 and one in 1986. Smeal said pro-choice
groups won't wait so long between marches again, a "mistake" activists
made because they felt the situation for women worldwide had been
improving under the Clinton administration.
Cynthia L. Cooper and Shaya Mohajer contributed to this story.Allison
Stevens covers politics in Washington, D.C. Cynthia L. Cooper writes
frequently about reproductive rights, justice and equality. Shaya Mohajer
is an intern at Women's eNews.
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