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Politics|Biden Denounces Abortion Bans, Warning That Privacy Is Next

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/23/us/politics/biden-abortion.html
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2024 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION

 * Who Is Running?
 * Will Hurd Enters Race
 * G.O.P. Candidates on Climate Change
 * Stances on Abortion

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BIDEN DENOUNCES ABORTION BANS, WARNING THAT PRIVACY IS NEXT

The president sought to galvanize supporters a year after the Supreme Court
overturned Roe v. Wade as Democrats hope the issue helps them win next year’s
elections.

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“Make no mistake, this election is about freedom on the ballot,” said President
Biden at a rally for reproductive rights on Friday.Credit...Tom Brenner for The
New York Times


By Peter Baker

Reporting from Washington

June 23, 2023Updated 7:26 p.m. ET

President Biden denounced on Friday new restrictions on abortion imposed in
Republican-led states in the year since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade
and warned that the right to privacy, which has been the foundation for other
rights like same-sex marriage and access to birth control, could be at risk next
if Democrats do not win next year’s elections.

Marking Saturday’s anniversary of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health
Organization decision eliminating a national right to abortion for women, Mr.
Biden decried its “devastating effects,” telling an abortion rights rally that
women had been deprived of basic health care and noting that some leading
Republicans, not content to leave the issue to the states as they had long
advocated, are now seeking a national ban on the procedure.

“They’re not stopping here,” said Mr. Biden, who was joined at the rally by his
wife, Jill Biden, as well as Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug
Emhoff. “Make no mistake, this election is about freedom on the ballot.”

The president collected the endorsement of the nation’s leading abortion rights
groups, Emily’s List, Planned Parenthood Action Fund and NARAL Pro-Choice
America. While the endorsement was hardly a surprise, the early timing
underscored the role that Democrats believe abortion rights will play in next
year’s election.



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Polls show that support for legalized abortion has risen since the Dobbs
decision. Democrats argue that it helped them avoid a Republican wave during
last year’s midterm elections — “you all showed up and beat the hell out of
them,” as Mr. Biden put it — and could be critical to retaining the White House
and recapturing the House next year. Republicans are at odds with each other
over how much to emphasize the issue, with some worried that it will only hurt
them in a general election. But some progressive activists have privately
expressed frustration that Mr. Biden has not made it more of a public priority
until now.


THE 2024 G.O.P. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES

Card 1 of 8

Donald Trump. The former president is running to retake the office he lost in
2020. Though somewhat diminished in influence within the Republican Party — and
facing several legal investigations — he retains a large and committed base of
supporters, and he could be aided in the primary by multiple challengers
splitting a limited anti-Trump vote.

Ron DeSantis. The combative governor of Florida, whose official entry into the
2024 race was spoiled by a glitch-filled livestream over Twitter, has championed
conservative causes and thrown a flurry of punches at America’s left. He
provides Trump the most formidable Republican rival he has faced since the
former president’s ascent in 2016.

Chris Christie. The former governor of New Jersey, who was eclipsed by Trump in
the 2016 Republican primary, is making a second run for the White House, setting
up a rematch with the former president. Christie has positioned himself as the
G.O.P. hopeful who is most willing to attack Trump.

Mike Pence. The former vice president, who was once a stalwart supporter of
Trump but split with him after the Jan. 6 attack, launched his campaign with a
strong rebuke of his former boss. An evangelical Christian whose faith drives
much of his politics, Pence has been notably outspoken about his support for a
national abortion ban.

Tim Scott. The South Carolina senator, who is the first Black Republican from
the South elected to the Senate since Reconstruction, has been one of his
party’s most prominent voices on matters of race. He is campaigning on a message
of positivity steeped in religiosity.

Nikki Haley. The former governor of South Carolina, who was a U.N. ambassador
under Trump, has presented herself as a member of “a new generation of
leadership” and emphasized her life experience as a daughter of Indian
immigrants. She was long seen as a rising G.O.P. star, but her allure in the
party has declined amid her on-again, off-again embrace of Trump.

Vivek Ramaswamy. The multimillionaire entrepreneur describes himself as
“anti-woke” and has made a name for himself in right-wing circles by opposing
corporate efforts to advance political, social and environmental causes. He has
promised to go farther down the road of ruling by fiat than Trump would or
could.

More G.O.P. candidates. The former Texas congressman Will Hurd, Mayor Francis
Suarez of Miami, Gov. Doug Burgum of North Dakota, former Arkansas Gov. Asa
Hutchinson and the conservative talk radio host Larry Elder have also launched
long-shot bids for the Republican presidential nomination. Read more about the
2024 candidates.

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Abortion has long been an uncomfortable issue for Mr. Biden, who has cited his
Catholic faith as his views have shifted over the years. While a young senator,
he declared that the Supreme Court had gone “too far” in the Roe decision and
later voted for a constitutional amendment allowing states to individually
overturn the ruling before reversing himself. He supported the so-called Hyde
amendment prohibiting the use of federal funds for abortion, including through
Medicaid, until the 2020 campaign, when he changed his mind under pressure from
liberals in his party.



By contrast, Ms. Harris has unabashedly joined the battle for abortion rights
since Roe was reversed, becoming by all accounts the administration’s most
passionate and effective voice on the issue. At Friday’s event, Laphonza Butler,
president of Emily’s List, praised Mr. Biden’s team as “the most pro-choice
administration we’ve ever seen” but reserved her most effusive words for Ms.
Harris.

The rally on Friday, organized with the Democratic National Committee, was part
of a series of messaging efforts by the Biden team around the anniversary of the
Dobbs ruling. Earlier this week, Dr. Biden hosted a session with women from
states that have imposed limits on abortion to highlight the consequences even
for those not seeking to end a pregnancy. On Saturday, Ms. Harris will deliver
an address on abortion rights in Charlotte, N.C.

Mr. Biden’s allies on Capitol Hill on Friday also called attention to the issue.
House Democrats led by Representative Ayanna S. Pressley of Massachusetts
introduced legislation to require insurance coverage to include abortion care,
shield patients and providers from criminal charges, and affirm a legal right to
abortion and miscarriage care. The bill has no chance of passing the
Republican-controlled House but was meant as a signal to supporters.



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As he has over the last year, Mr. Biden sought to expand the debate to other
privacy-related concerns, ideological ground where he is more comfortable, as he
cast Republicans as extremists beyond the question of abortion. The White House
announced Friday that in his third executive action in response to the Dobbs
decision, he was ordering federal agencies to look for ways to ensure and expand
access to birth control.



“The idea that I had to do that — I mean, no, really, think about it, think
about it,” he told supporters. “I know I’m 198 years old but all kidding aside,
think about that. I never, ever thought I’d be signing an executive order
protecting the right to contraceptives.”

He boasted that he had done more to put women in positions of power than any of
his predecessors. In addition to making Ms. Harris the first woman to serve as
vice president, he noted that he is the first president to have a majority-woman
cabinet, pointed to his appointment of Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black
woman on the Supreme Court and said that he had installed more Black women to
federal appeals courts than all of the previous presidents combined.

“Look, we made so much progress,” Mr. Biden said. “We can’t let them take us
backwards.”



Peter Baker is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the last five
presidents for The Times and The Washington Post. He is the author of seven
books, most recently “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021,” with
Susan Glasser. @peterbakernyt • Facebook

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