Supreme Court abortion ruling exposes deep chasm in the U.S.

America was convulsed with anger, joy, fear and confusion Friday after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

The canyon-like divide across the U.S. over the right to terminate a pregnancy was on full display, with abortion-rights supporters calling it a dark day in history, while abortion foes welcomed the ruling as the answer to their prayers.

In eliminating the constitutional right to abortion that has stood for a half-century, the high court left the politically charged issue up to the states, about half of which are now likely to ban the procedure. Some states, such as Oklahoma and Louisiana, had bans already on the books that automatically went into effect when Roe fell.

Hundreds of people surrounded the barricaded Supreme Court in Washington, some questioning the high court's legitimacy, while others cheered the ruling and proclaimed the dawn of a "post-Roe" world.

Many young people in the crowd wore red shirts that read "The Pro-Life Generation Votes," while chanting, "Pro life is pro woman!"

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Abortion-rights and anti-abortion protesters gather ahead of Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, federally protected right to abortion, in Washington, Friday, June 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

Others involved in the decades-long fight for women's rights felt an acute setback to the movement but remained hopeful it might prove temporary.

Carol E. Tracy, the executive director of the Women's Law Project in Philadelphia, was "absolutely furious" over the ruling.

"They want women to be barefoot and pregnant once again," she said. "But I have no doubt that women and like-minded men, and people in the LGBTQ community, who are also at great risk, ... we're going to fight back. I think it's going to be a long, hard fight."

The reaction across the country largely fell along predictable political lines.

New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat in a state where abortions are available with few restrictions, called the ruling a "war on women" and vowed to stand as a "brick wall" to help preserve the right. Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin vowed to seek a ban on abortions after 15 weeks.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a conservative Republican widely considered a potential candidate for president in 2024, tweeted: "The Supreme Court has answered the prayers of millions upon millions of Americans."

The issue is certain to intensify the fall election season. Both sides intend to use the issue to energize supporters and get them to vote.

"This country is lurching to the right, taking away rights. The voters are going to have to intervene," said Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina, the U.S. House majority whip. "We're headed to an autocracy with women being subservient to the wishes of men."

In Alabama, the state's three abortion clinics stopped performing the procedure for fear providers would now be prosecuted under a law dating to 1951.

At the Alabama Women's Center for Reproductive Alternatives in Huntsville, Alabama, the staff had to tell women in the waiting room Friday morning that they could not perform any more abortions that day. Some had come from as far away as Texas for an appointment.

"A lot of them just started breaking down crying. Can you imagine if you had driven 12 hours to receive this care in this state and you are not able to?" clinic owner Dalton Johnson said. Patients were given a list of out-of-state places still doing abortions.

Garrett Bess, who works with a lobbying arm of the conservative Heritage Foundation, said his group will continue to press states to restrict abortion.

"We'll be working with grassroots Americans to ensure the protection of pregnant mothers and babies," Bess said outside the Supreme Court. "This has been a long time coming, and it's a welcome decision."

Opinion polls show that a majority of Americans favor preserving Roe.

They include Alison Dreith, 41, an abortion activist in southern Illinois, where the governor has vowed to keep the procedure accessible. She said she fears for the safety of abortion workers, especially those who help people from states where the procedure is banned.

Dreith works with the Midwest Action Coalition, which offers gas money, child care and other practical support to women seeking abortions.

"I absolutely believe that they will try to come after me. I'm not built for prison, but I'm ready," she said, "and I say, 'Let's do this.' You want to pick that fight with me? I'm fighting back."

Boston's Roman Catholic Cardinal Sean O'Malley, the spiritual leader of about 1.8 million Catholics, called the ruling "deeply significant and encouraging." But he also cautioned against stigmatizing or making criminals out of women who have had abortions or are considering them.

"Too often isolated and desperate, women have felt they had no other choice," O'Malley said.

Medical student LaShyra Nolen, the first Black woman to become class president of Harvard Medical School, said she fears the effect of abortion bans on minority and poor women, among others.

"In the past month, we've seen that this country is not prepared to make sure that babies have access to formula, to be fed every day. We've seen that our children are not safe at our schools, because of a lack of gun control. We also continue to see devastating statistics that Black women are more likely to die in childbirth compared to white women," Nolen said.

"So when you have these harrowing disparities that exist in our country, and you force someone to give birth," she said, "I think it's going to lead to really dangerous measures and really dangerous conclusions."

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