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| Related Pages Ending Abortion How You Can Help in Any of a Number of Ways Contact Your Elected Officials Sample Letters on Current Issues Various Pro-life Talking Points and Sample Letters to Obama Barack Obama's Statement on the 35th Anniversary of the Roe v. Wade DecisionIn the below statement by President Obama, highlighted in bold are just some of the things that you may wish to talk to him and your other legislators about. Using the below, the sample letters in this area and the other food for thought in writing to President Obama, please put a letter in your own words (or use a sample letter as is), and mail it to your federal House representative and your two federal senators as well as President Obama. It's much better to send a form letter than not to send a letter at all. Source: http://www.livingcatholicism.com/archives/2008/09/the-change-we-n.html Senator Barack Obama released the following statement on January 22, 2008, the 35th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision.
Thirty-five years after the Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade, it's never
been more important to protect a woman's right to choose. Last year, the
Supreme Court decided by a vote of 5-4 to uphold the Federal Abortion Ban,
and in doing so undermined an important principle of Roe v. Wade: that we
must always protect women's health. With one more vacancy on the Supreme
Court, we could be looking at a majority hostile to a women's fundamental
right to choose for the first time since Roe v. Wade. The next president
may be asked to nominate that Supreme Court justice. That is what is at stake
in this election.
Throughout my career, I've been a consistent and strong supporter of reproductive
justice, and have consistently had a 100% pro-choice rating with Planned
Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America.
When South Dakota passed a law banning all abortions in a direct effort to
have Roe overruled, I was the only candidate for President to raise money
to help the citizens of South Dakota repeal that law. When anti-choice
protesters blocked the opening of an Illinois Planned Parenthood clinic in
a community where affordable health care is in short supply, I was the
only candidate for President who spoke out against it. And I will
continue to defend this right by passing the Freedom of Choice Act as
president.
Moreover, I believe in and have supported common-sense solutions like
increasing access to affordable birth control to help prevent unintended
pregnancies. In the Illinois state Senate, when Congress failed to require
insurance plans to cover FDA-approved contraceptives, I made sure
those contraceptives were covered for women in Illinois. In the U.S. Senate,
I've worked with Senator Claire McCaskill (D-MO) on a bill that would make
birth control more affordable for low-income and college women,
and introduced the Senate version of Representative Hilda Solis' bill to
reduce unintended pregnancies in communities of color. As President, I will
improve access to affordable health care and work to ensure that our
teens are getting the information and services they need to stay safe
and healthy.
But we also know that Roe v. Wade is about more than a woman's right to
choose; it's about equality. It's about whether our daughters
are going to have the same opportunities as our sons. And so to truly
honor that decision, we need to update the social contract so that women
can free themselves, and their children, from violent relationships; so that
a mom can stay home with a sick child without getting a pink slip; so that
she can go to work knowing that there's affordable, quality childcare for
her children; and so that the American dream is within reach for every family
in this country. This anniversary reminds us that it's not enough to protect
the gains of the past -- we have to build a future that's filled with hope
and possibility for all Americans.
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