President Joe Biden has confirmed that he would support making an exception to filibuster rules in the Senate to codify abortion rights and the right to privacy.
“We have to codify Roe v. Wade in the law,” Biden told reporters at a press conference in Madrid last week.
“The way to do that is to make sure that Congress votes to do that. And if the filibuster gets in the way, it’s like voting rights, it should be [that] we provide an exception for this.”
Democratic lawmakers, including Missouri Congresswoman Cori Bush, D-St. Louis County, have called for Biden to support an exception to the filibuster rule for this purpose.
“I’ve been pushing for abolishing the filibuster the entire time I’ve been in Congress, and it was like hitting a brick wall,” Bush told St. Louis on the Air. “And to hear our president now come out and say the same thing … change is happening.”
Vice President Kamala Harris is also calling for Congress to act.
“For nearly 50 years, we’ve talked about what Roe v. Wade protects. Today, as of right now, as of this minute, we can only talk about what Roe v. Wade protected,” she said.
“This is a health care crisis. Millions of women in America will go to bed tonight without access to the health care and reproductive care they had this morning, without access to the same health care or reproductive health care that their mothers and grandmothers had for 50 years.”
Bush said she wants to see an expansion of the U.S. Supreme Court. “It needs to reflect the needs of the majority of the people in this country,” she said.
She also supports a repeal of the Hyde Amendment (which bars the use of federal funds to pay for abortions) and the funding of resources to assist those who seek abortions in other states, to ensure “that they have vouchers for travel, childcare services … [and] other forms of support, like housing.”
Bush has also called on Biden to declare a public health emergency. “If the president does this, he’ll use that executive authority to open up the resources that we’ve been talking about — the resources for abortion care services, [to] expand and protect access to abortion pills,” she said.
Bush was at Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region and Southwest Missouri in St. Louis’ Central West End when she received the news that the Supreme Court had overturned Roe v. Wade. It’s the same location she visited in the mid-1990s to receive abortion care.
“I was 17 when I had to make that decision. It was the result of a rape,” she said. “I was able to do that just by picking up a phone and making an appointment — the same way I would pick up a phone and make an appointment for … any other service. That’s how easy it should be to be able to access our reproductive health care services because abortion care is health care.
“Honestly, I don’t know where I’d be right now if I ended up having the child of my rapist,” she added.
As Bush pushes for federal action to protect the right to abortion, she also wants her constituents to keep in mind that the procedure is available in other states.
“Abortion care is still available, and abortion care is also indispensable,” she said. “It is essential, and it is necessary to make sure that we are saving lives.”
This story was originally published in the St. Louis Public Radio.
