[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 555 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 555
Recognizing the importance of intersectionality for abortion access.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
June 23, 2023
Mrs. Watson Coleman (for herself, Ms. Kelly of Illinois, and Ms. Clarke
of New York) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on Energy and Commerce
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RESOLUTION
Recognizing the importance of intersectionality for abortion access.
Whereas 1 in 4 women in the United States will have an abortion before the age
of 45;
Whereas approximately 22 million women and girls of reproductive age live in
States where abortion is heavily restricted;
Whereas over 1 in 3 women, plus more trans and nonbinary people, have lost
access to abortion in their home States;
Whereas the most common reason to end a pregnancy is due to potential
interference with education, work, or the ability to care for
dependents;
Whereas nearly 50 percent of abortion patients have incomes below the poverty
level;
Whereas women living in poverty have a rate of unintended pregnancy that is five
times higher than those with middle-class or upper-class incomes;
Whereas unintended pregnancy remains the most common among poor women, women of
color, and women without a high school education;
Whereas Black women are twice as likely to have an unintended pregnancy than
White women;
Whereas Black women account for 38 percent of all abortions;
Whereas Black women founded the Reproductive Justice movement in 1994 to address
the lack of intersectionality and racial justice in the existing
abortion rights movement;
Whereas Black women are almost three times more likely than White women in the
United States to die from childbirth;
Whereas the risk of dying in childbirth is 14 times higher than the risk of
dying from a safe abortion;
Whereas the impacts of maternal mortality and increasing abortion restrictions
are closely related to each other and both rooted in persistent
structural racism and sexism;
Whereas LGBTQI+ individuals experience major disparities in abortion and
reproductive care;
Whereas an estimated 16 percent of individuals having abortions do not identify
as heterosexual women;
Whereas several hundred transgender and nonbinary individuals obtain abortions
annually at facilities that do not provide gender-affirming health care;
Whereas abortion care and gender affirming care are both fundamental to the
bodily autonomy of LGBTQI+ individuals;
Whereas the banning and restriction of abortion around the country has created
abortion-provider deserts, where some providers can only offer
medication abortion rather than both medication and surgical abortions;
Whereas medication abortion is the most common form of pregnancy termination and
accounts for more than half of all abortions in the United States and
increased access to abortions;
Whereas medication abortion is under threat by antiabortion advocates utilizing
junk science; and
Whereas decisions from the Supreme Court and Federal district courts are
threatening to the availability of abortions: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes that women of lower socioeconomic standing
face the greatest risk when abortion is restricted;
(2) acknowledges that women of racial and ethnic minorities
and particularly Black women are at highest risk when abortion
is restricted;
(3) acknowledges that surgical and medication abortions are
safe and any developments in science that affect abortion care
should be reviewed by scientific and medical experts; and
(4) calls upon the Federal Government to protect the right
to abortion across the country.
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