Finding Common Ground
There is no issue as politically-divisive in America as abortion. But beneath the rancor, there is an opportunity to find common ground. At a speech yesterday at the Center for American Progress, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said "whether you are pro-life or pro-choice, there is no question that the rate of unintended pregnancy in America is unacceptably high. Half of the six million pregnancies each year are unintended, and nearly half of these unplanned pregnancies end in abortion." Poor women are "four times as likely to have an unintended pregnancy" than their higher-income counterparts. Meanwhile, the right-wing has blocked efforts to expand access to birth control, "threatened the existing coverage of contraception for women in 25 states," and "shown no interest in making emergency contraception available to victims of sexual assault." Reid called on members of both parties to "stop using abortion for political gain" and "start supporting common sense measures" to reduce the number of unwanted pregnancies and help women have health pregnancies and healthy babies. Reid's speech comes on a day when America -- from Washington D.C. to South Dakota -- seems poised to reject hard-right ideology and embrace common sense solutions.
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