Call to Action: A Movement Declaration to Reconstruct American Democracy
But rather than being obstacles, these facts drive us forward. “Our votes are not supports but demands to be heard and to take action. A movement that votes does not vote for any party or any one person, we vote for our people and for our lives. We vote to summon a Third Reconstruction that can birth us out of an impoverished democracy and usher in a new world.”
Here is a summary of the seven steps:
The seven steps will ground us and focus our upcoming work. We hope you’ll take a moment to read them in full. |
PPC statement on the overturning of Roe v. Wade Amongst a series of disappointing rulings issued by the Supreme Court this week, the decision to overturn Roe v. Wade stands out as a watershed attack that will come to be known as the culmination of an extremist assault on this country’s gains toward equality and justice. “The immediate and long-term impact of this decision in Dobbs v. Jackson will be disproportionately felt by poor women, women of color, transgender and gender non-confirming people, all of whom already face increased healthcare disparities and economic insecurity,” write Rev. Barber, Rev. Theoharis, and national PPC policy director Shailly Gupta Barnes in an op-ed for Common Dreams.
Overturning more than 50 years of legal precedent (or stare decisis), the Court’s Dobbs decision jeopardizes any rights that were not already in place more than 150 years ago, when the 14th Amendment was ratified.
"Let us be clear," they write, "that the impact of Dobbs is not limited to these women or anyone whose health, security, and privacy are at greater risk because of this decision. They are just the frontlines of a broad-based assault on privacy that will impact how and when we decide to have children, who we can be in a relationship with and marry, how we raise our children, and how we die."
This decision—along with recent jurisprudence from the Court targeting voting rights protections, gun violence, the rights of immigrants, housing, public health and protections from police violence and the coercive power of the criminal legal system—is further evidence that the current Court is acting outside of the interests of the American people. The ultimate consequences of the court's decision to break from settled jurisprudence, the commands of the U.S. Constitution and all legal norms reveal again an emergency in the highest court. When the Supreme Court directs people to elected officials to protect constitutional rights, while gutting the right to vote through unrelenting attacks on the Voting Rights Act, our democracy is in acute crisis. To quote the Common Dreams article again, “The current U.S. Supreme Court is not a constitutionally legitimate body.”
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