WASHINGTON — Facing pressure from his party to act more aggressively to safeguard abortion rights, President Joe Biden on Friday announced new steps his administration is taking, including protecting access to medication and making legal representation available to women who choose to travel out of state for the procedure.
Advocacy groups have been pressing for strong action, such as a declaration of a public health emergency and leasing federal property to abortion providers, since the recent Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade. Biden has so far resisted the moves.
“The practice of medicine … should not be frozen in the 19th century,” Biden said in the White House Roosevelt Room.
Biden signed an executive order instructing the Department of Health and Human Services to protect and expand access to abortion care, including access to medication approved by the Food and Drug Administration as safe and effective for over 20 years.
The order tasks the department with taking additional steps to expand access to reproductive health services, including family planning services and providers, emergency contraception and long-acting reversible contraception like intrauterine devices, according to a fact sheet distributed by the White House.
The administration also is promising to increase outreach and public education on access to reproductive health care serves, including abortion, and to take steps to ensure the safety of patients and providers, including mobile clinics sent to borders to provide care for out-of-state patients.
An advocacy group pushing to restore and sustain public insurance said Biden’s actions don’t go far enough.
“We are glad to see the White House start to implement a whole of government approach to abortion access, but this plan, which the White House committed to months ago, is both late and not enough,” said Morgan Hopkins, interim executive director of campaigns and strategies at All* Above All.
NARAL Pro-Choice America called Biden’s actions “an important first step” in restoring rights stripped away by the Supreme Court decision.
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Biden called for the creation of a task force on access to reproductive health care and sought to provide some protection to women who travel across state lines to access clinical abortion services.
The attorney general’s office has been instructed to give assistance to states that offer legal protection to out-of-state patients and health care providers. The attorney general and the White House counsel’s office also will convene private attorneys that offer free legal services, as well as bar associations and public interest groups, to encourage legal representation to patients, providers and other groups that provide reproductive services.
Biden has been under pressure to protect abortion rights since the Supreme Court’s ruling two weeks ago that overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that had established a constitutional right to abortion.
Biden called the ruling “outrageous” and “destabilizing” and said last week that Congress must overturn it by writing Roe v. Wade into federal law. He also said he supports changing filibuster rules in the Senate to make it easier to codify the right to abortion and privacy into federal law.
Sixty votes are needed in the Senate to pass most legislation because of the filibuster. Changing the rules would allow senators to write Roe v. Wade into law with a simple majority. But getting rid of the filibuster is up to the Senate, and right now there aren’t enough votes to make that happen.
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Meanwhile, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra has said federal officials are working to increase access to medication abortion in limited circumstances, ensure providers have appropriate training and resources, and direct the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid to take legal steps to protect family planning care.
Biden’s order instructs Becerra to submit a report in 30 days on protecting access to abortion medication and contraception and ensuring that women have access to emergency medical care.
Fatima Goss Graves, president and chief executive officer of the National Women’s Law Center, lauded Biden for taking steps to protect access to reproductive services but warned that “speed and intensity” are demanded to get people the care they need.
“Undoing these injustices will take efforts by all of us, including using the full force of the federal government,” she said.
Hopkins, of All* Above All, said more women are being denied reproductive care every day as a result of the Supreme Court ruling.
“The ripple effects of the Supreme Court decision will spare no one – and the harm will fall hardest on people of color working to make ends meet,” she said. “President Biden must do more.”
March for Life, which opposes abortion, criticized Biden for issuing the order.
“It is tragic that this administration is using its power to push for more and more painful abortions which harm women and take innocent lives,” said the group’s president, Jeanne Mancini. “Our nation today faces significant challenges, not enough abortion is not one of them.”
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Michael Collins covers the White House. Follow him on Twitter @mcollinsNEWS.
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