Newport native makes abortion march
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Deepa Bharath
For Kayley Harrington marching shoulder to shoulder with hundreds of
thousands of abortion rights supporters was the most natural thing to
do.
The 21-year-old Newport Beach resident and Newport Harbor High
School graduate, who is a senior at American University in Washington
D.C., was part of the four-hour March for Women’s Lives rally at the
National Mall.
Harrington is a student of women and gender studies and works for
Advocates for Youth, an organization that educates young people about
reproductive and sexual health.
She was supposed to speak at the rally, but it was canceled at the
last minute, she said.
“Abortion is such a huge issue for young people,” she said. “Young
people, especially young women around the world, lack the information
they need to make abortion less necessary.”
The atmosphere at the march was “amazing,” Harrington said.
“It was empowering, energetic and positive,” she said. “You could
feel that all these people were absolutely passionate about the
issue.”
The march was necessary because there is imminent danger to
women’s reproductive rights, Harrington said.
Our leaders “are trying to chip away these rights at the state and
federal level,” she said.
“We need to lower teen pregnancy rates so it leads to less
abortion,” Harrington said.
Growing up in a predominantly conservative community didn’t stifle
her personal feelings and opinions, Harrington said.
“I knew I was always in the minority,” she said with a laugh. “But
I was able to develop my own thoughts and views.”
Her mother Karen Harrington went to Washington D.C. to participate
in the march with her daughter.
Assemblyman Ken Maddox, who represents Costa Mesa, said he
believes the rally “was more than a march for abortion rights.”
“It turned out into an anti-war, anti-Bush, pro-choice event,”
Maddox said. “What the president has attempted to do is end late-term
abortion.”
Republicans haven’t tried to “ban abortion in California,” he
said.
“We’ve only tried to get to notify parents when their minor
daughters have an abortion,” Maddox said. “But even that has been
stalled and was unsuccessful.”
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