

More and more men are stepping up.

By Martha Burk
Political Psychologist
Like it or not, abortion access has always been viewed as a โwomenโs problem.โ Men rarely talked about it, at least not publicly, and it didnโt seem to rank very high on their list of political priorities.
Not anymore.
Since Donald Trump proudly took credit for overturning Roe v. Wade with his anti-choice Supreme Court appointments, men have been forced to pay more attention โ particularly in red states with the most restrictive abortion policies.
As the costs of extreme abortion bans have mounted, men have seen their partners forced to delay or forgo essential medical care โ whether bleeding out in emergency room parking lots while suffering a miscarriage or taking on the huge expense of traveling between states. In extreme cases, theyโve seen their partners die.
Husbands with wives whoโve been denied care when a pregnancy goes wrong are now waking up and speaking out.
As a recent Washington Post article highlighted, one such couple had to drive 400 miles from their home in Arkansas to reach an Illinois clinic willing to end a pregnancy with a malformed fetus that would be stillborn if carried to term. The ordeal was enough to convert the husband from abortion opponent to pro-choice advocate working to get an abortion measure on the state ballot.
In states that ban abortion, virtually all clinics have closed since the Dobbs decision obliterated a womanโs right to control her own body. Facilities in bordering states have meanwhile been inundated with pleas from desperate couples seeking help.
More and more men are stepping up and joining Men4Choice, a national organization dedicated to recruiting men in the fight for safe and legal abortion. The group hosts community education events with young pro-choice men and organizes Get Out the Vote events mobilizing hundreds of male allies for contacting voters.
โItโs not just about abortion. Itโs about freedom. Itโs about power,โ founder Oren Jacobson told the Post. A prominent ally is second gentleman Doug Emhoff, who helps the group with outreach to broaden their membership.
According to data reported in the New York Times, more than 171,000 patients traveled for an abortion in 2023. Thatโs double the number who crossed state lines for an abortion in 2019, accounting for nearly a fifth of recorded abortions. Itโs a grim reminder of the upheaval in access since the overturn of Roe v. Wade. 2024 data is of course not complete, but thereโs no evidence that cross border trips for the procedure have slowed.
Then there are the uncounted casualties of these draconian bans: women unable to travel out of state for an abortion even though they desperately want or need the procedure. That includes women working at low wage jobs who canโt afford to take time off, cover child care costs while theyโre away, and pay for gasoline, food, and lodging for the trip.
Who knows how far this could go? Senator J.D. Vance (R-OH) has already signaled his support for prosecuting women who cross state lines for abortions. And in some states, zealots are trying to revive the 1873 Comstock Act to make birth control pills illegal.
Thereโs no reason to think theyโll stop there. Why not limit menโs choices too? Outlaw vasectomies and take condoms off the drug store shelves. Donโt laugh โ it could happen.
Bottom line: men, particularly in restrictive red states, are waking up and speaking out. Itโs a good bet their numbers will grow, and access to abortion will at last no longer be seen as just a womanโs problem. Because it isnโt.
Originally published by OtherWords, 09.25.2024, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative 3.0 license.


