President Biden will meet with health care providers Tuesday for a discussion on abortion rights after the end of Roe v. Wade while in Virginia for a reelection campaign rally.
Biden will be joined by Vice President Harris, first lady Jill Biden and second gentleman Doug Emhoff after the rally for a private discussion with providers, which will also include leaders from reproductive rights groups, according to the reelection campaign.
Biden will also meet privately with Amanda Zurawski, who was one of five women who sued Texas last year for denying them an abortion while facing pregnancy complications. When she was told her baby would not survive but had a heartbeat, doctors told her they couldn’t provide care. When she went septic, the hospital agreed that she was ill enough to induce labor and she delivered her child, who passed away.
At the rally, the Bidens, Harris, and Emhoff will deliver remarks about “the stakes of the 2024 election on reproductive freedom to an audience of leaders and members of the reproductive rights groups, members of Congress, and grassroots supporters,” the campaign announced.
The rally and discussion will take place in Northern Virginia to highlight that in 2023, Democrats retained the Senate, flipped the state House to blue and “rejected” Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s (R) effort to put in place restrictions to abortion access. Biden won Virginia in 2020, beating then-President Trump.
At the rally, Biden will discuss the impact the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade had on women in states with abortion restrictions or bans. The president gave remarks Monday also highlighting the “cruel reality” the end of Roe created for women in the U.S.
Harris at the rally will discuss so-called MAGA Republicans’ attacks on reproductive freedoms. She gave remarks Monday trying Trump directly to the end of Roe v. Wade in Wisconsin, a key battleground state in 2024.
Biden’s reelection campaign released an ad Monday featuring Dr. Austin Dennard, an OB-GYN in Texas and mother of three who couldn’t receive an abortion in Texas. Dennard, who narrated the ad, placed the blame for her situation squarely on Trump.