Until fairly recently — I’m talking the last few months — it felt like making the connection between racism and the American anti-abortion movement was mostly an academic endeavor.
You’d find the history in obscure Twitter threads and textbooks, but if you weren’t steeped in daily news about reproductive rights (or aren’t a nonwhite pregnant person), it may have been easy to miss the anti-abortion movement’s explicit references to race.
But Republicans have removed all pretense that their opposition to abortion is based on anything but deeply held, racist beliefs.
Black women are Louisianans. They’re not statistics to be ‘corrected’ and parsed from the broader data.
Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., helped drive that home with comments he made last week, in which he seemed to boast about how good his state’s maternal mortality rate might be if not for the existence of Black women. When Politico asked Cassidy, who staunchly opposes abortion rights, why the maternal death rate in his state is so high, the senator suggested Black women were merely an outlier responsible for driving up that number.
“About a third of our population is African American; African Americans have a higher incidence of maternal mortality. So, if you correct our population for race, we’re not as much of an outlier as it’d otherwise appear,” Cassidy told Politico.
But … Black women are Louisianans. They’re not statistics to be “corrected” and parsed from the broader data, and it’s obviously racist to suggest separating their pregnancy-related deaths from the total number in order to downplay the severity of maternal mortality.
Seemingly detecting the awfulness of his comments, Cassidy claimed his remarks were meant “not to minimize” but “to focus the issue.”
“For whatever reason, people of color have a higher incidence of maternal mortality,” he added.
The reasons — primarily, systemic racism — are well documented. Cassidy, a former physician, was rightly dragged for his comments.
It’s no surprise that a member of the party that scores political points by spewing conspiratorial “great replacement” rhetoric and fomenting moral panics about so-called critical race theory in schools is perfectly comfortable ignoring the plight of Black American mothers. (5/8)








