
Based ona draft opinion leaked Monday, the Supreme Court appears poised to overturn the landmarkRoe v. Wadedecision that guaranteed the right to abortion. If that happens,23 states will likely immediately ban or restrict abortions, affecting millions of Americans.
“According to all the public polling that I have seen, access to abortion is what most people in this country want,” Smith, the junior senator from Minnesota, says.
Polling from Pew Researchshows that a majority of U.S. adults — 59% — say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, a percentage that has held steady for 26 years, since 1995. A similar percentage of Americans support upholdingRoe, according toa poll from Quinnipiac, which found that 63% agree with the court ruling, anda Marquette Law School pollfound that 72% oppose the decision being overturned.
That’s part of why the leaked opinion “felt like getting socked in the gut,” Smith says.
Smith, who volunteered at Planned Parenthood and was later the vice president of the organization’s health care centers in Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota, said that thewomen she would see at the clinicswere clearheaded about their decision.
“I saw them make those decisions with so much clarity and capacity to make good decisions,” she says. “For them, this doesn’t feel like a political issue. This feels like a personal issue about what they need to do to take care of themselves and their family.”
“That’s why the position of the Republican party and Republican candidates is just so out of step with where Americans are on this.”
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IfRoedoes fall,Congress has the ability to codify the right to abortion into a nationwide law. They can do that now, and the House passed theWomen’s Health Protection Actto make that happen last year, but when the Senate moved to vote on it in March Republicans, along with Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin from West Virginia, blocked it from going to the floor for debate. Smith has previously spoken in support of the bill, and is calling on her fellow senators to act.
“Congress, we should do this,” she says. “We should put into law the basic protections in theRoe v. Wadedecision; the right to access to abortion up until viability.”
Currently, even if the bill makes it to the Senate floor for debate, it would not have enough votes to pass with Democrats holding just a slim majority. “That makes it impossible for us to take legislative action, which is why I think this will be such an important issue as we think about the elections coming up in November,” Smith says.
For more on the leaked SCOTUS opinion to overturnRoe v. Wade, listen below to our daily podcast PEOPLE Every Day
For those wondering what they can do now with afinal decision from the Supreme Courtlikely coming in late June, Smith advises that people “do what I’m going to do, which is go out and find pro-choice candidates that I believe in and work for them and get them elected, whether it’s a Senate candidate or a gubernatorial candidate or a local legislative candidate.”
source: people.com