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W.House Protesters Demand Biden do More to Defend US Abortion Rights

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Hundreds of abortion rights protesters waved banners and chanted Saturday outside the White House to demand the president take stronger action to protect access to the procedure recently revoked by the Supreme Court. online news

The estimated 1,000-strong crowd of mainly women shouted slogans like “My body, my choice” and some sat down on the sidewalk in pouring rain, with police standing by.

With President Joe Biden spending the weekend at his vacation home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware a few hours away, demonstrators called on him to do more to combat the June 24 Supreme Court ruling overturning the Roe v Wade decision of 1973, which enshrined the right to abortion in the United States.

“Stand up, Joe Biden,” said Becca, 37, who traveled more than two hours to Washington from Virginia. She carried a banner reading, “Abortion on demand without apology.”

Abortion rights in online news & headline news
Protesters hold placards expressing their opinion during the demonstration. Feminists and pro-abortion rights protesters gathered in central London to stand in solidarity with the women in the United State. The US Supreme Court recently overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision that affirmed the constitutional right to abortion. The crowd started from Trafalgar Square and marched to the Embassy of United States of America in London. (Photo by Hesther Ng / SOPA Images/Sipa USA)(Sipa via AP Images)

She said an executive order Biden signed on Friday aiming to help women access abortion pills and travel to states where they can still get an abortion was insufficient.

“Fix this! This executive order that he put out wasn’t enough,” said Becca, who declined to give her last name.

“I want a world that wasn’t the world that my grandmother had to live in. My mom already fought for this in the streets. We shouldn’t have to be here,” she added.

Another woman, Christine, came to the rally with her three daughters, one in her 20s and the other two in their teens.

“We really feel that he needs to explore the fullest extent of his power of the executive branch to ensure that women retain their rights, their reproductive rights,” Christine, 50, said.

“And I am here to ensure that my daughters don’t have to go back 50 years in time to the days where abortions were happening in back alleys,” added Christine, who also declined to give her last name.

Biden, whose room for maneuver on the issue is limited, has come under fire for perceived inaction since the court ruling.

As he signed the executive order Friday, he called on Americans to vote en masse and elect pro-choice lawmakers in November and give him firm control of Congress, so he can codify abortion rights into federal law and bypass the Supreme Court ruling.

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