As the overturn of Roe v. Wade looks increasingly likely, pro-life advocates and pro-abortion activists have presented visions of America after Roe that could not be more different. The pro-life movement’s is hopeful and helpful. The abortion lobby’s is apocalyptic — and impoverished.
Category: Dobbs
Dannenfelser & Donovan, Washington Post: The road beyond Roe for the pro-life movement
For the pro-life movement, the excitement about the possible reversal of the 49-year-old precedent of Roe v. Wade is real, even as we know the road ahead is uneven.
Dannenfelser in the Daily Caller: Life is Winning in America
If Roe is indeed overturned, our job will be to build consensus for the strongest protections possible for unborn children and women in every legislature and in Congress.
Marjorie Dannenfelser on MSNBC: The majority of Americans support restrictions on abortion that Roe does not allow
Dannenfelser: Anybody who embraces abortion up until the end and wants taxpayers to pay for it is not a viable candidate. And I think Democrats are going to start to see this at the polls.
Mallory Carroll on CNN: There are two people in every abortion decision.
We know more than ever before about the development of the child in the womb — the fact that there are two people in every abortion decision.
We need to move the U.S. back in line with modern science.
The Supreme Court’s Latest Case Is The Most Consequential One For The Pro-Life Movement In Generations
The Dobbs late abortion case heard by the Supreme Court this week is the most consequential case for the pro-life movement in two generations. In this case involving Mississippi’s law to limit abortions after 15 weeks, the Court agreed to consider whether any pre-viability limits on abortion are constitutional – a question with implications for millions of lives, born and unborn, and for American democracy.