(Washington) “Hands off our bodies! “: Thousands of demonstrators take to the streets of the United States on Saturday to defend the right to abortion, threatened by the Supreme Court which seems ready to go back, 50 years after its historic decision to protect abortion.
Posted at 10:03 a.m.
“We are done with attacks on abortion. We are demonstrating today to say it loud and clear: don’t touch our bodies, ”said Women’s March in a tweet on Saturday, one of the organizations behind this great day of action.
Some 450 parades are organized across the country, including large marches in Washington, New York, Chicago, Austin and Los Angeles.
In the capital, the parade is due to start at 2 p.m. to head towards the Supreme Court building. At least 17,000 people are expected, according to organizers.
Even if it is supported by a majority of the population, according to recent polls, the right to abortion has been a very divisive social issue since the historic “Roe v. Wade” of January 1973, which protects the right of American women to terminate their pregnancies.
The Supreme Court, which must render its decision by the end of June on a Mississippi law limiting the legal deadlines for abortion, has been in turmoil since the beginning of May and the revelation by the Politico news site of a draft judgment. which, if adopted as is, will grant US states the right to prohibit or authorize abortions.
Abortion is already restricted in 23 Republican-led states and more are awaiting the Supreme Court’s decision, now firmly entrenched in conservatism, to follow that path.
About 20 conservative states have already promised to make it illegal, some even in cases of rape or incest, which would force women to travel thousands of miles to have an abortion.
Since the revelations of Politico, groups – more or less dense – come every evening to shout their anger in front of the American temple of law, an imposing white marble building now protected by a fence.
“My body, my choice”
And some demonstrators protest to cries of “my body, my choice” even in front of the home of conservative judges of the Court in the wealthy suburbs of the capital.
If the judgment is overturned, “it will be horrible” predicted to AFP Linda Coffee, who represented Jane Roe at the time, and who today castigates a “very vocal minority” of opponents to abortion. .
“We won’t stop fighting until everyone, and I mean everyone, has access to safe and legal abortions, regardless of income, zip code or ethnicity,” promised elected official Barbara Lee, who has in the past publicly spoken about her own clandestine abortion.
Without the Supreme Court, the options for protecting this right at the federal level are slim. The Chamber did vote last fall for a law guaranteeing access to abortion throughout the country. But this text does not manage for the moment to pass the stage of the Senate, where the Democrats do not have a sufficient majority.
For progressives, support could also come from the economic world. More and more companies, which have long avoided this subject, are taking a stand for the right to abortion with the emergence of a new generation of leaders with different expectations.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen also warned of “very damaging economic consequences” if women’s “right to decide when, and if, they want to have children” were undermined.