
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The antiabortion movement spent nearly 50 years organizing around one goal: overturning Roe v. Wade. With that success, what’s next? We go inside the movement’s biggest annual event to examine its diverging paths and possible futures.
The annual March for Life is the antiabortion movement’s biggest event of the year, bringing tens of thousands of protesters to the National Mall in D.C. But this year’s march was different. With Roe v. Wade now overturned and the constitutional right to an abortion no longer guaranteed, the movement has achieved its most important singular goal – the one around which it had coalesced for nearly 50 years.
National political reporter Caroline Kitchener went inside this year’s march to see how the antiabortion movement is approaching this post-Roe moment, and how its possible paths forward may be diverging. With a sense of jubilation on one hand and an air of disappointment on the other, she found a movement wrestling with how to stay united and win a bigger battle: the hearts and minds of a country that largely favors abortion.
Antiabortion politicians are mounting efforts to further restrict abortion locally and nationally. Their efforts could restrict access to abortion even in so-called “haven states.” And an imminent federal district court ruling in Texas could have a “catastrophic” effect on access to abortion pills nationwide.
Caroline’s ongoing audio reporting with “Post Reports” was honored this week with a prestigious duPont-Columbia Award! You can listen to more of our coverage of this important issue here:
Preparing for a post-Roe America
In Oklahoma, a closing window to access abortion
Drafting the end of Roe v. Wade
The untold story of the Texas abortion ban
The day Roe v. Wade fell
She wanted an abortion. Now, she has twins.
By The Washington Post4.2
51935,193 ratings
The antiabortion movement spent nearly 50 years organizing around one goal: overturning Roe v. Wade. With that success, what’s next? We go inside the movement’s biggest annual event to examine its diverging paths and possible futures.
The annual March for Life is the antiabortion movement’s biggest event of the year, bringing tens of thousands of protesters to the National Mall in D.C. But this year’s march was different. With Roe v. Wade now overturned and the constitutional right to an abortion no longer guaranteed, the movement has achieved its most important singular goal – the one around which it had coalesced for nearly 50 years.
National political reporter Caroline Kitchener went inside this year’s march to see how the antiabortion movement is approaching this post-Roe moment, and how its possible paths forward may be diverging. With a sense of jubilation on one hand and an air of disappointment on the other, she found a movement wrestling with how to stay united and win a bigger battle: the hearts and minds of a country that largely favors abortion.
Antiabortion politicians are mounting efforts to further restrict abortion locally and nationally. Their efforts could restrict access to abortion even in so-called “haven states.” And an imminent federal district court ruling in Texas could have a “catastrophic” effect on access to abortion pills nationwide.
Caroline’s ongoing audio reporting with “Post Reports” was honored this week with a prestigious duPont-Columbia Award! You can listen to more of our coverage of this important issue here:
Preparing for a post-Roe America
In Oklahoma, a closing window to access abortion
Drafting the end of Roe v. Wade
The untold story of the Texas abortion ban
The day Roe v. Wade fell
She wanted an abortion. Now, she has twins.

25,829 Listeners

4,058 Listeners

3,646 Listeners

1,382 Listeners

4,442 Listeners

112,263 Listeners

56,657 Listeners

2,479 Listeners

2,368 Listeners

107 Listeners

10,287 Listeners

7,264 Listeners

2,409 Listeners

2,779 Listeners

6,075 Listeners

6,403 Listeners

2,372 Listeners

16,331 Listeners

232 Listeners

296 Listeners

1,251 Listeners

995 Listeners

405 Listeners

344 Listeners

173 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

751 Listeners

642 Listeners