Brantford Expositor e-edition

Biden vows to fight after Roe v. Wade overturned

`The health and life of women across the nation are now at risk,' president says

CHRIS MEGERIAN, ZEKE MILLER and FATIMA HUSSEIN

U.S. President Joe Biden said Friday he would try to preserve access to abortion after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, and he called on Americans to elect more Democrats who would safeguard rights upended by the court's decision. “This is not over,” he declared.

“Let's be very clear, the health and life of women across this nation are now at risk,” he said from the White House on what he called “a sad day for the court and the country.”

Biden added that “the court has done what it's never done before — expressly taking away a constitutional right that is so fundamental to so many Americans.”

Republicans and conservative leaders celebrated the culmination of a decades-long campaign to undo the nationwide legalization of abortion that began with Roe v. Wade in 1973.

“Millions of Americans have spent half a century praying, marching, and working toward today's historic victories for the rule of law and for innocent life,” said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., an architect of efforts to tilt the Supreme Court to the right.

Although Biden has previously expressed conflicted feelings about abortion, he delivered a forceful defence on Friday. Noting that Republican-controlled states now had a clear path to ban abortion even in cases of incest or rape, he said “it just stuns me.”

And he warned that other legal precedents ensuring same sex marriage and access to birth control could also be at risk.

“This is an extreme and dangerous path,” he said.

The overturning of Roe v. Wade was not unexpected — a draft of the decision leaked nearly two months ago — but it still reverberated throughout Washington in what has suddenly become a new era in the country's battle over abortion.

The White House and the Justice Department said they would look for ways to blunt the impact of the ruling, and Biden said his administration would try to ensure that abortion medication is available as widely as possible and women aren't prevented from travelling across state lines to end pregnancies. However, no executive actions were announced on Friday, and Biden conceded that his options were limited.

Protesters convened on the Supreme Court, where a crowd of abortion-rights supporters quickly swelled to the hundreds.

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2022-06-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-06-25T07:00:00.0000000Z

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