2,500 protest abortion at Connecticut March for Life

Reinvigorated by the fall of Roe v. Wade, thousands of anti-abortion activists rallied outside the state Capitol Wednesday for the second annual Connecticut March for Life, pushing their dream of an abortion-free state.

Carrying religious iconography, “Choose Life” signs, and ultrasound photos, protesters bussed in from across the state filled the Capitol’s North Lawn. A representative from the Capitol Police estimated that 2,500 people joined the Hartford rally and march around Bushnell Park — an uptick from the hundreds of attendees counted in 2022.

Over cheers and applause, Peter Wolfgang, president of the Family Institute of Connecticut, called that first march “the beginning of a new era for the pro-life movement in Connecticut.”

“What has happened since we met here last year? Roe versus Wade is over. And someday the 1990 law, still keeping abortion legal in Connecticut will be over, too,” Wolfgang said. “Someday when we live in a Connecticut where every unborn child is protected in law and welcomed in life it will be because you are here today.”

Wolfgang and others attacked legislative proposals to expand abortion protections in the state. Protestors locked in on what they described as “taxpayer funded abortion tourism” in H.B. 6618, a proposal to implement a “Safe Harbor Fund” that would cover certain costs for women who travel to Connecticut in search of a legal abortion.

Former politician Christopher Healy, executive director of the Connecticut Catholic Conference, which co-hosted the event, emphasized civic engagement and contacting lawmakers to block legislation. In addition to abortion, Healy also opposed medical aid-in-dying and urged attendees to “stop the culture of death that permeates our society, our state, and our neighborhood.”

“Your voices, when they’re told directly to a lawmaker, a state legislator or a state senator, will be heard, especially if you do it over and over again,” Healy said. “You’ve got to urge others. It’s not just an email, it’s not just leaving a message, it’s asking for an audience.”

The sole lawmaker to address the crowd was Democratic State Rep. Treneé McGee, whose remarks emphasized “creating a culture of life” by investing in women, mothers, children and education.

“As I think about the 69 million abortions that have taken place, and how 19 million of them were Black children, I think about my community. It becomes very personal to me,” McGee said. “We’ve learned that when we create safe environments, women feel safe to have children, carry life, and produce life. So in creating a culture of life, we have to care about one another.”

Several women in the female-heavy lineup of speakers spoke against beliefs that equate reproductive freedom with feminism.

“I went off to college and was surrounded by so-called feminists who convinced me that women’s empowerment meant full access to abortion without restrictions.” march director Erin Getz of the March for Life Education and Defense Fund. “Abortion harms women physically, mentally, emotionally.”

Melissa Manion, who had an abortion before joining the pro-life movement, spoke about “stolen fatherhood.”

“The anthem is ‘my body, my choice’ and although we hear a lot about the fact that there is an entirely separate body involved, we never hear about stolen fatherhood,” Manion said. “I decided to have an abortion without my boyfriend’s knowledge or consent. I called Planned Parenthood and made that appointment. … When my boyfriend came home happy as usual I looked him in the face and essentially told him, ‘I am ending the life of our child and there’s nothing you can do about it.’ ”

Making their way toward Bushnell Park, anti-abortion marchers crossed paths with a small group of counter-demonstrators bearing rainbow flags and signs in support of reproductive choice.

“We felt that we had to have a presence here,” Barb Kapustynski of the Norwalk Actions for Reproductive Justice said.

As the masses marched on, Kapustynski and Melissa Murray said that the crowd is not indicative of the Connecticut electorate.

“We know the majority of voters actually are for abortion and see abortion as health care,” Murray said. “We know what happens when women can’t choose their lives. It’s important to allow women to have the health care to choose their lives and make their own decisions.