It might never have happened. Planned Parenthood just made it to its 100th anniversary despite what may have been its hardest year ever. Hillary Clinton just clinched the Democratic nomination after a long and sometimes bruising obstacle course years in the making.
On Friday, the two met for Clinton’s first general election address, and the timing seemed only fitting.
“As president, I will always have your back,” Clinton told the assembled activists. She unapologetically proclaimed support for abortion rights: “Defending women’s health means defending access to abortion – not just in theory, but in reality.” She called for the expansion of Planned Parenthood’s funding for nonabortion women’s health services and for federal funding of abortion, and she name-checked transgender health issues and reproductive justice activists. In a room that was rapt and grateful, she fluently spoke their language.
RELATED: Clinton: Trump will reverse progress for women
Both Clinton and Planned Parenthood had come a long way to reach that moment, and not just because Clinton had run before for the Democratic nomination and lost; or because she weathered a strong challenge from Bernie Sanders; or because of any number of scandals, real or perceived, hers or those of the people around her.
Though Clinton has always voted in favor of access to abortion and contraception, a decade ago, she infuriated women’s health advocates by using gauzy “common ground” language on abortion that they saw as unilaterally disarming in the face of attacks. Back then in 2005, she called abortion “a sad, even tragic choice to many, many women,” which activists saw as stigmatizing patients and adopting the framing of the right, which often justifies restrictions on abortion by saying they protect women.
That’s not what she said Friday. “We know that restricting access doesn’t make women less likely to end a pregnancy,” Clinton said. “It just makes abortion less safe. And that then threatens women’s lives.” She lauded comprehensive sex education and affordable, effective contraception in lowering the unintended pregnancy rate.








