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Protesters march to Alabama’s Capitol to decry the state’s new abortion ban

Abortion rights protesters in Alabama hold a March for Reproductive Freedom rally in front of the Capitol in Montgomery on Sunday.
(Seth Herald / AFP/Getty Images)
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Hundreds of demonstrators marched to the Alabama Capitol on Sunday to protest the state’s newly approved abortion ban, chanting “My body, my choice!” and “Vote them out!”

The demonstration came three days after Gov. Kay Ivey signed the most stringent abortion law in the nation — making performing an abortion a felony in nearly all cases unless necessary for the mother’s health. The law provides no exception for rape and incest.

“Banning abortion does not stop abortion. It stops safe abortion,” said Staci Fox, chief executive and president of Planned Parenthood Southeast, addressing the cheering crowd outside the Alabama Capitol.

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Alabama is part of a wave of conservative states seeking to mount new legal changes to Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 landmark Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion nationwide. Governors in Kentucky, Mississippi, Ohio and Georgia have approved bans on abortion once a fetal heartbeat is detected, which can happen as early as the sixth week of pregnancy.

None of the laws has actually taken effect, and all are expected to be blocked by the courts as the legal challenges play out with an ultimate eye on the Supreme Court.

Marchers said Sunday that the measures have energized supporters of legalized abortion, and they say they are digging in for a legal and political fight.

Carrying an orange sign with a coat hanger and the caption “No Never Again,” 69-year-old Deborah Hall of Montgomery said she remembers life before Roe and can’t believe the push to return there.

“I had friends who had illegal abortions and barely survived,” said Hall, who for a time ran a clinic in Montgomery that provided abortion, birth control and other services.

“I still cannot believe it. It’s really a scary time for everybody,” she said of the push to overturn Roe.

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Amanda Reyes, who runs Yellowhammer Fund, a nonprofit that provides funding to help low-income women obtain abortions, said donations have begun streaming in since passage of the Alabama bill.

Groups this week paid for a small plane carrying a banner “Abortion is Okay!” to circle the Capitol and the governor’s mansion.

The Alabama law would make it a felony, punishable by up to 99 years or life in prison to perform an abortion. There would be no punishment for the woman receiving the abortion.

But the protest outside the Capitol on Sunday comes in a state where a majority of voters recently agreed to put antiabortion language in the Alabama Constitution. Fifty-nine percent of state voters in November approved the constitutional amendment saying the state recognizes the rights of the “unborn.”

“To the bill’s many supporters, this legislation stands as a powerful testament to Alabamians’ deeply held belief that every life is precious and that every life is a sacred gift from God,” Ivey said in a statement after signing the ban into law.

The sponsor of the Alabama law, Rep. Terri Collins, (R-Decatur), said the purpose is to challenge Roe, and Alabama lawmakers can come back and add exemptions if states regain control of abortion access.

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