At a fundraiser in San Francisco last week, Vice President spoke bluntly about the future of reproductive rights: California is not immune to a national abortion ban, she said.
鈥淭he stakes are high,鈥 Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, said to a cheering crowd at the Fairmont Hotel that included Gov. Gavin Newsom and other high-profile Democrats. She continued the theme this week at the Democratic National Convention, where delegates have stressed their fears that reproductive rights could be curtailed nationwide.
As the Democratic nominee, Harris has made a central issue in the presidential race. Political strategists and pollsters say it鈥檚 a winning issue for Democrats, with the majority of the American public supportive of to some degree even as nearly two dozen states have passed abortion bans since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and ended federal abortion protections.
Where did Harris鈥 full-throated support for abortion rights come from? According to colleagues, friends and Harris鈥 public record, it鈥檚 anything but new.
She built a reputation in California as a prosecutor who backed abortion rights, and, as attorney general, Harris threw her weight behind multiple abortion issues with national consequences. Two standouts include investigating claims that Planned Parenthood and supporting regulation of .
鈥淎s long as I have known her, this has always been a core issue,鈥 said San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu. Chiu is a former Democratic assemblymember who has known Harris for more than 20 years and worked with her on multiple statewide campaigns opposing ballot measures that would have required doctors to tell parents before performing an abortion on a minor.
That record gives her credibility to her platform on reproductive rights, but it also makes her a target among anti-abortion groups who stamp Harris as an extremist.
鈥淭he party that called for abortions to be 鈥榮afe, legal and rare鈥 is long gone,鈥 said Marjorie Dannefelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, in a press release on the Democratic National Convention鈥檚 2024 platform. 鈥淭hey ignore the majority of women facing unplanned pregnancy who want real solutions to keep their children, not more pressure to abort. And they lack the courage to tell the truth about their agenda to go even further than Roe by passing a national all-trimester abortion mandate.鈥
Investigating anti-abortion group
As attorney general, Harris鈥 first foray into the highly charged national abortion debate came in April 2016 when investigators from the California Department of Justice raided the home of anti-abortion activist David Daleiden, seizing a laptop and hard drives.
Nine months prior, Daleiden posted videos purporting to show Planned Parenthood executives engaging in the illegal sale of fetal remains. The videos showed covertly filmed conversations of Planned Parenthood executives discussing abortion procedures and how tissue is collected and exchanged with research companies. At least 13 state investigations, including those initiated by Republican lawmakers, have since debunked the claims made by Daleiden in the videos.
Donating fetal tissue to researchers and recouping expenses is legal under U.S. law and states may impose additional regulations.
But at the time the videos set off a firestorm of outrage across the country. They鈥檙e circulating again on social media this election cycle.
Conservatives characterized Harris鈥 investigation into Daleiden as a political inquisition. Anti-abortion groups protested the raid, and some California Republicans called on Harris to investigate Planned Parenthood instead of Daleiden.
She made no public remarks about Daleiden.
鈥淗arris never held a press conference. She didn鈥檛 do that,鈥 said Dan Morain, a former CalMatters editor who wrote a biography of the vice president called 鈥.鈥 鈥淪he was doing what prosecutors need to do, (which) is not try the case in public.鈥
The evidence gathered by Harris鈥 justice department laid the groundwork for later filed by then-Attorney General Xavier Becerra against Daleiden and his counterpart Sandra Merritt, alleging they recorded conversations without consent in violation of state law.
At the time, Daleiden called the charges 鈥渂ogus.鈥 He has maintained he was exercising his First Amendment rights when he recorded conversations with Planned Parenthood leaders, and that the recordings were obtained legitimately in public places.
鈥淚nstead of prosecuting the persons and organizations caught on tape (of) commercially exploiting fetal tissue transfers, the Attorney General instead targeted Daleiden and Merritt,鈥 court documents filed by Daleiden鈥檚 attorney state.
Kathy Kneer, who was chief executive of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, refuted the idea that Harris granted the organization 鈥渁ny special favors.鈥 Instead, the organization was required to supply investigators with reams of documentation, she said.
鈥淭hey really held our feet to the fire and did everything within the letter of the law,鈥 Kneer said.
Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California declined to be interviewed for this story. The organization has endorsed Harris.
The criminal case against Daleiden is ongoing with a jury trial scheduled for December. The state Supreme Court most recently from Daleiden and Merritt in 2023, allowing the jury trial to move forward. In 2019, a civil jury ruled against Daleiden and awarded Planned Parenthood $2.2 million in damages, which the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed by dismissing Daleiden鈥檚 federal appeal in 2023.
Backed California law regulating pregnancy centers
Around the same time, Harris sponsored a bill in the Legislature to regulate crisis pregnancy centers. It was a relatively risky move, some say, which would end up backfiring when the U.S. Supreme Court sided with anti-abortion groups and overturned the law.
鈥淪he stuck her neck out on that one by sponsoring the bill,鈥 Morain said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite apparent that it wasn鈥檛 necessarily going to be the case that it was deemed constitutional.鈥
The legislation 鈥 simple on its face 鈥 required crisis pregnancy centers to post a notification stating that comprehensive family planning services including contraception and abortion were available through state public programs.
are often religiously affiliated organizations that aim to prevent women from getting abortions. They may offer free diapers, parenting classes and other social services, but abortion rights advocates also accuse them of misleading women about the dangers of abortion and contraception 鈥 an accusation that many centers deny.
Center owners and those in the pro-life movement vehemently opposed the law, stating that the government was forcing them to advertise something with which they fundamentally disagreed.
鈥淚t was not right, not fair and clearly unconstitutional,鈥 said Thomas Glessner, president of the National Institute of Family and Life Advocates, a legal organization with about 155 member pregnancy centers in California.
Almost as soon as then-, the National Institute of Family and Life Advocates filed a lawsuit to stop it.
In 2018, the on First Amendment grounds. Since then, lawmakers across the country have struggled to regulate pregnancy centers. There are at least , according to a 2023 CalMatters analysis.
鈥淲e won the case and it was hailed by a lot of free speech advocates as鈥he most significant free speech case in a generation,鈥 Glessner said.
Though the law was struck down, supporters don鈥檛 necessarily see it as a strike against Harris鈥 record. Chiu, who co-authored the bill, said he believes the law was narrowly tailored and would have been upheld if former President Donald Trump had not appointed three Supreme Court justices during his term.
Abortion on the ballot after Roe
Harris鈥 public messaging on abortion has been remarkably consistent throughout her career. She has repeatedly credited her work as a local prosecutor specializing in sex crimes against women and children for her condemnation of total and near total abortion bans that make no exceptions for rape or incest.
鈥淭he idea that states would be passing laws that would take from an individual their right to self determination after they have endured such an atrocious act of violence is unconscionable,鈥 Harris said during a in 2022.
On the campaign trail, Republican presidential nominee Trump has said he would and pushed the that hints at, but doesn鈥檛 outright acknowledge, fetal personhood. He has taken credit for the Supreme Court repealing Roe v. Wade, and said the issue should be settled by individual states.
Republicans 鈥渂acked away from clarity,鈥 said Mary Ruth Ziegler, an abortion historian and legal scholar from UC Davis School of Law, on the updated Republican platform. 鈥淭he platform is very confusing, and I think that鈥檚 on purpose because it鈥檚 designed to appeal to people with a wide variety of positions on abortion.鈥
It鈥檚 an unsurprising, calculated move, said Mike Madrid, a long-time California GOP strategist and Trump opponent, because abortion is a losing issue for Republicans. It鈥檚 Harris鈥 strongest issue, he said.
鈥淎s long as you鈥檙e focused on an issue that is not your strength, you either do a complete 180 on it or you鈥檙e going to suffer on the polls,鈥 Madrid said.
Ziegler also said the type of outrage Daleiden and his organization Center for Medical Progress tried to stoke 10 years ago with his undercover videos may have less impact on today鈥檚 voter in part because states have actually banned abortion.
鈥淭he strategies that might have worked to paint supporters of abortion rights as extremists don鈥檛 seem to be as effective in a world where, you know, almost half the country has some kind of ban,鈥 Ziegler said.
San Diego Democratic state State Sen. Toni Atkins, who ran two reproductive health clinics before seeking public office, called Harris 鈥渢he loudest and most visible and most prominent voice on reproductive freedom.鈥
That visibility has included her visiting a Planned Parenthood clinic earlier this year, the first vice president to do so. But because of her long-running support, pro-life advocates like Glessner see a Harris presidency as a threat.
鈥淲e immediately sent out an invitation for her to visit a pro-life pregnancy center鈥nd of course never got a response,鈥 Glessner said. 鈥淲hy don鈥檛 you come and see who you鈥檙e criticizing and give us a fair shake.鈥
The Harris campaign did not respond to several interview requests for this story.
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