Close
Current temperature in Boston - 62 °
BECOME A MEMBER
Get access to a personalized news feed, our newsletter and exclusive discounts on everything from shows to local restaurants, All for free.
Already a member? Sign in.
The Bay State Banner
BACK TO TOP
The Bay State Banner
POST AN AD SIGN IN

Trending Articles

Community Music Center of Boston to open new campus in Roxbury

Coalition alleges bias in vocational school admissions

Facing climate change, urban farmers adapt

READ PRINT EDITION

Kamala Harris’ fight for reproductive freedom

Ben Jealous

It matters deeply that America has a woman as our vice president. Nothing makes this more clear than Vice President Kamala Harris’s courageous decision to champion reproductive freedom in the midst of a full-on assault on the right to choose.

Right now, Harris is traveling the country on a Reproductive Freedom Tour. As noted by the New York Times, “The vice president has been the administration’s most forceful voice for abortion rights in the year and a half since Roe v. Wade fell.”

Even among those of us without a uterus, the impact of her courage affects many of us personally.

It affects me as a girl’s dad, as a member of this country, and because the person who shaped me most as an organizer is my grandmother, Mamie Todd, who started her career in social change at Planned Parenthood in Baltimore. Even though abortion was illegal then, the basic mission was the same: reproductive health and freedom. And while the work mainly focused on birth control, education and some routine health care, it was not without its challenges — especially in a Catholic city in a Catholic state.

By the early 1940s, when my grandmother was doing this work, things had come a long way since 1916, when Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger was arrested for opening the nation’s first birth control clinic in Brooklyn. But the Comstock Act was still on the books and enforced. That law defined contraceptives as obscene and made it a federal crime to send them through the mail or transport them across state lines.

In the pre-Roe v. Wade era, when abortions were illegal in most parts of this country, many still depended on them in order to extricate themselves from abusive relationships or avoid other dire consequences. Abortions forced to be conducted in secret frequently resulted in death or injuries that would leave women unable to bear children.

Adding to the risk was that many who performed these abortions were terrible doctors … or not even doctors at all. Patients were desperate. There was no system for review of, or accountability for, this type of medical care.

From 1973 to 2022, when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, abortions were safe and legal. Now, the Dobbs decision has created a flood of laws threatening to send us back to the dark ages. And it is not stopping. Just this month, the Missouri state Senate voted down two amendments to the state’s medieval abortion laws that would have allowed exceptions for rape and incest.

That’s why Harris’s leadership is so important. It is easy to imagine that a male with a similarly impressive resume as a litigator and advocate could, too, be a stalwart for this fundamental right. But the difference is evident when you watch Harris on the stump, speaking against  laws that would deny freedom to women who find themselves in the situation my mother was in back then. You cannot help but sense that she feels the urgency in her bones in a way that no man could.

Let me be clear about the responsibility men have at this moment to be good allies. Part of my parents’ bond has always been that my father understood men have a role to play in the fight against gender inequality and sexism.

It is time for all of us, regardless of gender, to stand together and push back against the callous disregard for the lives, health and social equality of those seeking abortions. Lawmakers acting upon the Supreme Court’s signal to eviscerate reproductive freedom will not stop unless we stop them. Thank God we have a courageous woman in the vice presidency fighting to do just that.

Ben Jealous is executive director of the Sierra Club and a professor of practice at the University of Pennsylvania.