Dozens of people marched Saturday afternoon through the Loop and Millennium Park to protest ongoing legal threats to abortion pills.
Rise Up 4 Abortion Rights organized Saturday’s protest following recent conflicting decisions from federal judges surrounding mifepristone, a common abortion pill.
“We are facing the greatest threat to women’s lives and freedoms since last summer when the Supreme Court decided women are second-class citizens,” said Jay Becker, an organizer with Rise Up 4 Abortion Rights.
A federal judge in Texas on April 7 issued a preliminary ruling that invalidated the Food and Drug Administration’s two-decade old approval of mifepristone. An hour later, a judge in Washington state contradicted the decision and instructed the FDA to make no changes.
The issue landed Friday at the U.S. Supreme Court, which temporarily blocked restrictions on the drug pending a decision next week.
Protesters said they were worried the high court could potentially further restrict access to abortion.
“To revoke the approval of mifepristone is a major step toward banning abortion nationwide,” Becker said. “This is all about female enslavement and whether women will be treated as full human beings or not.”
Patricia Wallin, another organizer with Rise Up 4 Abortion Rights, shared how abortion bans in her home country of El Salvador personally impacted her. As a teenager, her friend got pregnant and she took her life, Wallin said.
“Her life would have been saved if she had access to abortion,” Wallin said. “Women in Latin America are uniting to fight together. They are not staying passive and silent, this is a reality they refuse to live in. And women in this country need to do the same and not stay silent.”
After speeches in Federal Plaza, protesters marched through the Loop, handing out stickers and flyers to pedestrians and receiving cheers from bystanders and supportive honks from cars.
“Red state, blue state you can’t hide, the war on abortion is nationwide,” and “fascist judges make me ill, hands off the abortion pill” were among the protesters’ chants.
Along the way, they stopped at the Walgreens on State Street. They chanted, “Walgreens hates women,” referring to the drugstore chain’s decision to stop providing abortion pills at their pharmacies in states where Republican attorneys general have threatened legal action.
From there, the group made its way through Millennium Park, stopping at the Bean and outside the Art Institute to make speeches.
“We are not fighting for some blue bubble here, we are fighting for women everywhere,” Becker said. “If one of us is not free, then none of us are free.”