Jan. 22
marked the 43rd anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision,
which ruled that abortion is a fundamental right under the U.S. Constitution.
Rallies in cities around the country reflected the fact that the right to
abortion continues to be under attack through state restrictions, continual
anti-abortion rhetoric, and specific attacks on Planned Parenthood.
This past
year, those attacks included not only continual harassment of Planned
Parenthood clinics but a gunman entering the clinic in Colorado Springs, Col.,
and killing three and wounding nine people. In addition, in July, an
anti-abortion organization, Center for Medical Progress (CMP), made allegations
that a Planned Parenthood clinic in Houston had attempted to illegally profit
from selling fetal tissue. This resulted in cries from politicians to defund
Planned Parenthood.
In a
surprising turn of events, three days after the nationwide rallies to support Roe
v. Wade, a grand jury in Harris County, Texas, cleared the Houston Planned
Parenthood clinic of all the charges. Moreover, it indicted the top leaders of
the CMP organization who had prompted the investigation in the first place.
CMP founder
David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt were both charged with using fake driver’s
licenses, and Daleiden was charged with violating the Texas law prohibiting the purchase and
sale of human organs, the same law that he accused Planned Parenthood of
breaking. He had sent an e-mail to Planned Parenthood seeking to buy fetal
tissue.
Planned
Parenthood and their Houston lawyer Josh Schaffer used an
unconventional strategy. Instead of taking on a defensive posture, they
cooperated fully with the investigators. They volunteered documents, encouraged
prosecutors to interview employees, and gave them free rein of their facility.
The Planned
Parenthood statement about the indictments was clear: “These anti-abortion
extremists spent three years creating a fake company, creating fake identities,
lying, and breaking the law, and when they couldn’t find any improper or
illegal activity, they made it up.”
This is an
important victory on the long road to protecting a woman’s right to abortion.
The next struggle involves the U.S. Supreme Court.
In June the
U.S Supreme Court is scheduled to make a decision on Health v. Cole, which
according to the Center For Reproductive Rights is designed to shut down more
than 75% of all women’s health clinics that provide abortion services in the
state of Texas. Roe v. Wade was won because feminists demanded an end
to back-alley abortions and the right to safe and legal abortion. We will need
a strong, visible movement to fight yet another attempt at chipping away at
that right.
>> The article above was written by Ann Montague, and is reprinted from Socialist Action newspaper.
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