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'Throughline': The history of abortion2 after 1973
NPR's history podcast Throughline explores how opponents of abortion rights banded together, built power and launched one of the most successful grassroots campaigns of the past century.
LEILA FADEL, HOST:
The Supreme4 Court's 1973 decision in Roe5 v. Wade6 transformed the abortion rights landscape overnight. The people who opposed those rights were deeply shaken and newly motivated. In the years since Roe, they began advocating their cause more broadly to bring more people into the movement and gain political power. Today, Rund Abdelfatah and Ramtin Arablouei at NPR's history podcast Throughline take us back to that time to help us understand how what happened then paved the way for the recent Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe.
BERNARD ROSENFELD: My name's Bernhard Rosenfeld. I'm a board certified7 OB-GYN doctor. I'm an abortion provider.
RUND ABDELFATAH, BYLINE8: And you're talking to us from Texas.
ROSENFELD: Houston.
ABDELFATAH: Houston. How long have you lived in Houston?
ROSENFELD: Now 40 years.
ABDELFATAH: So 40 years ago would have been in, I guess, the early '80s.
ROSENFELD: 1980.
ABDELFATAH: In 1980, Ronald Reagan was elected president.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
JOHN CHANCELLOR9: We have projected Ronald Reagan the winner.
ABDELFATAH: It was a victory for opponents of abortion rights. As a candidate, Reagan had made opposition10 to abortion rights an important part of his campaign, even though he supported laws to expand abortion rights while governor of California.
RAMTIN ARABLOUEI, BYLINE: So when he won the presidency11, it signaled the beginning of a new era for the movement.
ABDELFATAH: And for Dr. Rosenfeld, who had carried out abortions12 in Michigan, Maryland and even Reagan's home state, California, before landing in Texas, something seemed to be changing on the ground.
ROSENFELD: The anti-abortion groups started picketing13 the clinics and then even started picketing my home. So it really exploded.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: Hey, ma'am, can I give you some information? Young lady, whatever your circumstances are, would you just be willing to come talk with us?
ABDELFATAH: They called themselves sidewalk counselors14 and stood outside clinics to intervene before a woman had an abortion.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #1: There have probably been lots of voices urging you to abort1 your child. But we're here to talk with you about whatever the situation is that makes you feel that's necessary.
JENNIFER HOLLAND: They coordinate15 between all the anti-abortion groups in the city so that someone always takes a day, and so someone is protesting all the time.
ARABLOUEI: Jennifer Holland is the author of the book "Tiny You: A Western History Of The Anti-Abortion Movement." She says the movement was adopting a strategy in the early 1980s that placed women alongside the fetus16 as victims and abortion providers as the ones with blood on their hands.
HOLLAND: Reagan passed his laws, giving more room to activists17, especially in schools.
ABDELFATAH: But by the mid-1980s...
HOLLAND: Roe has been sort of the law of the land for a decade or more.
KARISSA HAUGEBERG: So if you were anti-abortion in 1986, you would wonder, like, you know, I've done everything. I've gone through the - you know, the traditional levers.
ABDELFATAH: This is Karissa Haugeberg, author of "Women Against Abortion: Inside The Largest Moral Reform Movement Of The 20th Century."
HAUGEBERG: I voted for an anti-abortion president, maybe anti-abortion senators, and nothing has changed.
HOLLAND: This is the moment when a certain segment embraces what they call the rescue movement.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED NEWSCASTER #1: Earlier this month, hundreds affiliated18 with a group called Operation Rescue staged anti-abortion demonstrations20 in New York City.
ARABLOUEI: Carole Joffe, author of "Obstacle Course: The Everyday Struggle to Get an Abortion in America," says...
CAROLE JOFFE: Their mission was to end abortion.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
RANDALL TERRY: The judges, the politicians, they're getting the signal, as is Planned Parenthood, NOW, ACLU, etc. Legalized child-killing's days are numbered. We will win.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED NEWSCASTER #2: This CBN News exclusive footage shows a clinic worker arriving just before 7 a.m. to open the doors. She is met by the sight of protesters blocking those doors. The confrontation21 you are seeing resulted...
HOLLAND: You know, constant harassing22 phone calls, glue in locks, sometimes actually going in and chaining themselves to equipment.
PHIL LEAHY: We would sit down and it was, you know, the sit-in movement in the in the '60s with - it was the civil rights movement, and it was more or less the same thing.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: Help us, oh, God.
ROSENFELD: They destroyed property. They put garden hoses on our roof and wrecked23 the roofs.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: Help us, Jesus.
ROSENFELD: You know, had chemicals that they threw.
LEAHY: And then there would be arrests, and we'd just spend time in jail.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED NEWSCASTER #3: Police did arrest 275 protesters at this demonstration19. Six hundred ninety more were arrested at...
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
UNIDENTIFIED PERSON #2: Reform our country, God, before it's too late. Amen.
JOFFE: The first abortion doctor was killed in Pensacola, Fla., in March '93.
HAUGEBERG: So one thing that I think a lot of people don't understand is that there has been an undercurrent of violence to the anti-abortion movement since it began. So even in the 1960s, I found evidence of people sending hate mail, wishing people who were publicly identified as pro-choice or having had an abortion - sending the messages saying, like, you're going to hell; I hope you die, that sort of thing.
HOLLAND: But, you know, once it escalates24 to kidnapping and murder, that really did pose a real problem for the mainstream25 movement.
DANEEN DOLCIE: They picture me with six guns on my hips26 and bombs in my hand, you know? That's just not us. But that's what they want to see.
HOLLAND: They had to imagine these people as, you know, what I think the media calls, like, lone27 wolves - mentally unstable28 people and people who were marginal, not sort of a real part of the movement.
DOLCIE: But there will always be those people.
ABDELFATAH: In 1994, Congress overwhelmingly approved the Freedom of Access to Abortion Clinic Entrances Act, which made it a federal crime to use physical force, threaten or obstruct29 someone from getting an abortion. That didn't mean protesters couldn't stand outside of clinics. But there were now more barriers against the worst kind of violence and vandalism. Despite that, violence would continue to plague clinics over the coming decades.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
ARABLOUEI: And it put the abortion issue front and center in the national conversation. With the violent wing of the movement facing more scrutiny30, mainstream activists doubled down on their political ambitions, working within the system to make ending abortion and getting rid of Roe a central issue for the Republican Party.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
FADEL: Those were Throughline hosts Ramtin Arablouei and Rund Abdelfatah. You can hear the whole episode on the podcast Throughline.
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