Unwavering Resolve: Anti-Abortion Advocates Convene in Washington to Strategize for Future Restrictions

Unwavering Resolve: Anti-Abortion Advocates Convene in Washington to Strategize for Future Restrictions

Unwavering Resolve: Anti-Abortion Advocates Convene in Washington to Strategize for Future Restrictions

Mike Pence had a message: always ‍vote against abortion rights –⁤ even if, he suggested, that means voting for Donald Trump.

‘We don’t want to be the bad guys’: anti-abortion marchers seek post-Roe stanceRead more

“That’s why we⁤ have primaries. We sort ’em out at⁢ every‍ level. But after the primary’s over, you vote pro-life,” the former Republican vice-president to​ Trump‍ told a ‌downtown Washington DC ballroom of young, diehard anti-abortion activists on Saturday. “You go get behind men and women who are going to⁢ stand for the right to life.”

The room erupted into applause.

The​ activists⁢ had gathered in the ballroom for the National Pro-Life Summit, the conclusion of a two-day extravaganza of anti-abortion activism in the US capital. On Friday, many had walked through the snowy ⁣streets of Washington to⁤ support the March for Life, the largest annual anti-abortion event ​in the United States.

But while⁣ the March for Life is a mass show of force, the National Pro-Life Summit is far⁣ more focused. It aims to arm the foot soldiers of the anti-abortion movement, high school-⁤ and college-aged activists, with the education and energy they need to effectively advocate against abortion rights – especially in an election year.

In the months since the US​ supreme ​court ⁤overturned⁣ Roe, abortion rights supporters have repeatedly defeated abortion foes in ballot referendums, even in conservative strongholds such as Kansas, Kentucky⁣ and Ohio.

This ‍string of‌ losses, though, has seemingly hardened the stance of summit attendees and speakers. Rather than compromising, summit ⁤speakers urged young people: Don’t give up. Do more.

I want to see no abortions be legal, everKristan ⁣Hawkins, president⁣ of Students for Life ‍of America

“We ⁤need ⁢to ‌be bolder. We ⁣need to be louder,” Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America, the organization behind the⁢ Pro-Life Summit,⁢ said. ⁢“We’re working in 10 to 17 states this year, introducing various pro-life laws, doing as⁢ much as we ‌can to save as many lives. So I want to see no​ abortions be legal, ever.”

In the morning, summit attendees gathered in a massive ballroom‍ lit in shades of purple, purple and pink. Speakers spoke against ‍a teal backdrop emblazoned with logos for groups​ such as the Heritage Foundation and the Alliance ​Defending Freedom, two powerful organizations that are spearheading much of ‌the conservative political and legal charge against causes like abortion and LGBTQ+ rights.

The speakers’ talks portrayed the abortion foes in the room as the descendants of freedom fighters such as soldiers in the US ⁣revolutionary war and⁢ the second world war. The historical analogies did not‍ stop‌ there: they also drew comparisons between abortion, the Holocaust and the 7 October attack​ in Israel.

The fight ⁤against abortion, they suggested, was‌ no less than righteous spiritual warfare.

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2024-01-20 15:11:40
Article from www.theguardian.com

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