The Washington Times

Roe foes add up 55 million legalized abortions

Marchers to take message to Mall

Last of three parts

With a slogan created especially for the 40th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision, hundreds of thousands of pro-life activists are expected to swarm the Mall on Friday for the annual March for Life.

As always, the marchers’ chants about choosing life, loving babies and “Roe v. Wade has got to go” will be answered by more than a few counterprotesters who say “Keep abortion legal” and “Not the church, not the state, women must decide their fate.”

But this year’s March for Life has a new message to convey — “40=55M” — meaning that since abortion’s national legalization in 1973, some 55 million unborn lives have been ended by the procedure.

“Abortion truly is the human rights abuse of today,” said Jeanne Monahan, the new president of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund. The march’s previous leader was its founder, Nellie Gray, who died in August at age 88.

March for Life speakers this year are expected to include Sen. Rand Paul, Kentucky Republican; Rep. Christopher H. Smith, New Jersey Republican; and Rep. Diane Black, Tennessee Republican. House Speaker John A. Boehner, Ohio Republican, and Rep. Daniel Lipinski, Illinois Democrat, are expected to speak via video.

Other scheduled speakers include Cardinal Sean P. O'Malley, chairman of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' committee on pro-life activities; Georgette Forney, president of Anglicans for Life and co-founder of the Silent No More Awareness Campaign; Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council; former Sen. Rick Santorum, chairman of Patriot Voices; and Patrick Kelly, chairman of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund.

An estimated 400,000 marchers participated last year, and this year’s goal is to reach 500,000, said Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life. “And you’ll see more young people than adults. We are a pro-life generation,” said Ms. Hawkins, noting that her organization alone was bringing in students from 150 campus groups.

The pro-life marchers will encounter opposition, though.

Abortion rights activists said they are planning a counterprotest at the march, especially with signs saying, “Abortion on demand and without apology.”

“Forced motherhood is female enslavement,” Sunsara Taylor of StopPatriarchy.org told 60 pro-choice leaders and supporters who chanted, carried signs and shivered at the Supreme Court steps at an evening vigil Tuesday, the Roe anniversary day.

“Abortion is not a murder. Fetuses are not babies,” said Ms. Taylor, echoing a chant by her allies: “A baby’s not a baby until it comes out — that’s what a birthday is all about.”

Too many states are attacking abortion with restrictive laws, Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation and veteran abortion rights leader, said at the vigil.

“We can’t take this any longer. We have got to step up this fight,” said Ms. Smeal. Democrats haven’t done all they could either, “but right now we have a full-scale war on women being conducted by the Republican Party,” she said. “So, fight on. Never give up. Never give in.”

Pro-life activists didn’t miss the Tuesday anniversary of Roe, either.

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About the Author
Cheryl Wetzstein

Cheryl Wetzstein

Cheryl Wetzstein covers family and social issues as a national reporter for The Washington Times. She has been a reporter for three decades, working in New York City and Washington, D.C. Since joining The Washington Times in 1985, she has been a features writer, environmental and consumer affairs reporter, and assistant business editor. Beginning in 1994, Mrs. Wetzstein worked exclusively ...

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