In many ways, the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade three years ago was just the beginning of the attack on women’s reproductive rights in America.
The 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization that ended of the constitutional right to an abortion has since emboldened Republicans to go after other forms reproductive care, including IVF and contraception.
The results have been devastating for women and their families. Today, 19 states ban abortion or restrict the procedure, putting more than 60 million women and girls who need reproductive care into life-threatening circumstances.
Since the overturn of Roe v. Wade, mothers living in states that banned abortion were almost twice as likely to die during pregnancy, childbirth or soon after giving birth, compared to mothers living in states where the procedure was legal, according to a recent report by the Gender Equity Policy Institute.
Georgia mother Adriana Smith was among those women who paid the ultimate price in states with strict abortion bans. The 30-year-old nurse and mom to a young son was declared brain-dead in February, while 9-weeks pregnant at the time. Due to the state’s near-total abortion ban, the hospital kept her on life-support without her family’s consent until the baby was delivered prematurely via emergency C-section on June 13.
Concurrently, the Trump administration has targeted access to mifepristone — one of two pills needed for a medication abortion — in primary care settings, despite evidence that it’s safe to prescribe.
The president has also revoked a Biden administration requirement that hospitals provide emergency abortions to women whose health is in peril, including in states where abortion is restricted or banned.
Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers in more than half of the states where voters passed constitutional amendments to protect or expand reproductive rights challenged the will of their voters with new legislation that would dismantle abortion access, or even criminalize the procedure.
While the battle for women’s health reaches a crescendo, popular support for reproductive freedom remains unwavering, even in conservative strongholds.
Jessica Mackler, the president of EMILYs List — a national group that backs Democratic women who support abortion rights — lays out what’s at stake for women and what can be done to fight back.
Below is the conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Know Your Value: On the third anniversary of the overturn of Roe v. Wade, how would you describe the state of play when it comes to women in America and reproductive rights?
Mackler: The state of reproductive care in this country is a full-blown crisis. Because of cruel Republican abortion bans, tens of millions of women have no say in decisions about their bodies, lives and futures. Anti-choice lawmakers have forced doctors to deny women stabilizing care amid dire medical emergencies, and it’s costing lives.
Still, Republicans are showing us that they aren’t satisfied with overturning Roe v. Wade; they won’t stop until they’ve banned abortion entirely. Just this month, they snuck provisions into the budget bill that would restrict abortion even in blue states that protect it.
On the 51st anniversary of Roe v Wade, here’s what women have lost — and gained
They are actively using the federal agencies at Donald Trump’s disposal to enact a backdoor, national ban on abortion. And in states where abortion is legal, Republicans are trying to ban reproductive health care completely, even after a majority of voters passed ballot initiatives to protect it.
For example, in Ohio a bill to ban abortion, IVF and forms of contraception — while criminalizing women who have abortions with homicide charges — was introduced last week.
No form of reproductive healthcare in this country is safe. Republicans are laying the groundwork across the country to pass bans on both birth control and IVF. If we’re going to reverse course, to restore and protect reproductive rights in America, we need to vote these Republicans out of their positions of power — plain and simple.
Know Your Value: What have been some of the unexpected repercussions for women since the Dobbs decision took effect?
Mackler: The fall-out from the Dobbs decision is as far-reaching as it is devastating. State abortion bans have skyrocketed rates of both maternal deaths and infant deaths. Women in states with abortion bans are nearly twice as likely to die during pregnancy or directly after giving birth.
Not being able to get an abortion also has long-term consequences. State bans directly impose economic hardship on women and families. They decrease the likelihood that women are able to work or finish school. They also increase the chances that families will live in poverty.
There are tens of millions of women in states with abortion bans being forced to live through these horrifying consequences. In the years to come, without restoring the protections of Roe v. Wade, we will find out even more extensive ramifications of what happens when Republicans take away our basic health care.
Know Your Value: You’ve opened up about your own abortion story. How does your personal experience shape the work you do today?









