This story was published as part of Outlook's 11 November, 2024 magazine issue titled 'Whitewash'. To read more stories from the issue, click here
I바카라m in Tennessee, in the midst of my journey across America as the country plunges into the fevered pitch of election season. From New Hampshire바카라s sun-baked town halls to Pennsylvania바카라s packed high school gyms and here in the quiet suburbs of Tennessee, there바카라s been one constant undercurrent바카라the fierce determination of young women.
Whether in swing states like Arizona or deeply conservative ones like Georgia, young women are speaking up, mobilising and preparing to make their voices heard on what may be the defining issue of the 2024 presidential election바카라reproductive rights.
I바카라m standing outside the Carafem clinic in Mount Juliet, Tennessee, located in the unassuming Providence Pavilion. This clinic was once central to reproductive healthcare in the Nashville area, but it also found itself at the centre of the fight over abortion rights. In 2021, the clinic was targeted by anti-abortion protesters who staged a blockade, hoping to prevent women from accessing care. The protesters live-streamed their efforts, and the scene outside was tense, with patients trying to enter the clinic as protesters chanted slogans and police maintained order.
Back then, abortion was still legal in Tennessee, but now the landscape has completely shifted. In August 2022, after the Supreme Court바카라s Dobbs v. Jackson decision led to Tennessee바카라s total ban on abortion, Carafem had to halt all in-person abortion services. The clinic remains open for telehealth and other healthcare services, but the absence of in-person abortion care is deeply felt here.
What바카라s striking is how this shift has galvanised young women across America. With eight million new voters eligible in 2024, they could be the key to determining the election. According to Change Research, three in four young voters believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases, and four in ten (40 per cent) women under 30 now name abortion as their top issue, a figure that has doubled since earlier this year. Kamala Harris바카라 campaign has leaned into this momentum, and her focus on reproductive rights is resonating deeply with younger voters. Among younger Democratic women, trust in Harris바카라 handling of abortion has surged from 35 per cent to 66 per cent since June.


The engagement is not limited to Democratic voters. As I바카라ve spoken to young women in states like Pennsylvania and Arizona, I바카라ve met many who are breaking from traditional party lines over the issue of abortion. This reflects a broader trend where young women, regardless of party affiliation, are prioritising personal freedom over partisanship. For them, abortion is not just a political issue바카라it바카라s a matter of controlling their bodies, their futures and their economic stability.
As Gloria Steinem, an American journalist and social activist noted: 바카라For the first time, a significant number of women will vote as equal citizens, cutting across party lines and family loyalties.바카라 This evolution marks a turning point in the American politics, one driven by young women determined to protect their rights.
Some students on the Vanderbilt University campus gave me the phone number of a former student who바카라d experienced a dramatic shift in perspective. 바카라You have to meet her,바카라 they insisted. After a bit of back-and-forth messaging, I arranged to meet her outside the Carafem clinic near Nashville.
She was leaning against her car when I arrived, eyes fixed on the now-empty clinic, a place she knew well for complicated reasons. 바카라I was part of the blockade here,바카라 she confessed, her voice tinged with regret.
A registered Republican, she had once been committed to the anti-abortion cause. But over time, as she faced her own struggles and saw the impact of restrictions on women around her, her perspective began to shift. Now, she stood here for a different reason, with a new sense of urgency. 바카라I바카라m voting because I can바카라t afford not to,바카라 she said firmly. 바카라This is about my freedom, my career, and my right to choose when I바카라m ready for motherhood.바카라 It was a transformation that captured what바카라s at stake in this election for many women like her.
According to a survey of women voters, 58 per cent trust vice-president Harris over Donald Trump to manage abortion access, including 17 per cent of Republican women.
The fallout from the June 24, 2022, Roe v. Wade바카라s reversal has been swift and severe. Within a year of the decision, over 200 women have been criminally charged for pregnancy-related actions, whether managing their own abortions, experiencing miscarriages that raised suspicions or engaging in behaviours deemed risky during pregnancy. Between 2006 and June 2022, 1,396 arrests were tied to pregnancy-related issues, and at least 61 people were investigated or arrested for ending their pregnancies between 2000 and 2020. These aren바카라t just statistics바카라they represent real women facing real consequences, a fact that is pushing young women to engage with politics like never before.


The consequences of losing Roe extend far beyond abortion access. In March 2024, an appeals court in Texas ruled that the state could ban contraception for minors without parental consent at Title X clinics, the only source of confidential contraception for teens.
On a muggy afternoon in Columbus, Ohio, earlier, I met Zoe, a 20-year-old college student sitting outside a bustling cafe near campus, flipping through a thick stack of textbooks. She wore a faded 바카라Roe, Roe, Roe Your Vote바카라 T-shirt, her curly hair pulled back into a messy bun, with a hint of exhaustion in her eyes. She was juggling a full course load and a part-time job to pay tuition. Her voice cracked with frustration as we spoke. 바카라It바카라s terrifying,바카라 she said, clutching a notebook covered in feminist slogans. 바카라It바카라s not just about abortion anymore. It바카라s everything바카라contraception, basic healthcare, everything that helps us plan our futures. How can we even think about getting ahead if we can바카라t control what happens to our own bodies? It feels like they바카라re trying to take away the tools we need to survive, let alone succeed.바카라
Young women understand that this election is not just about preserving one right; it바카라s about defending their futures. For them, reproductive rights are also fundamentally tied to economic opportunity. Women who cannot access safe, legal abortions are four times more likely to live below the poverty line. They are more likely to drop out of school, work in low-wage jobs and struggle to achieve financial stability.
Harris바카라 campaign has made this connection explicit, framing reproductive rights as essential to achieving both gender and economic equality. At a rally called the 바카라Conversation on Reproductive Freedom바카라 at the Salus University in Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania, the room was filled with young women holding signs that read, 바카라My Body, My Choice바카라, and wearing T-shirts emblazoned with 바카라Protect Roe바카라. Harris, with the energy of someone deeply committed to the fight, told the crowd, 바카라The stakes couldn바카라t be higher for this November.바카라
Her words drew loud cheers and applause.
She spoke passionately about laws that criminalise healthcare providers, particularly highlighting Texas바카라 law that penalises doctors for non-emergency abortions. 바카라The idea that so-called leaders would deny survivors of violence the right to decide what happens to their bodies is immoral,바카라 she declared, her voice sharp and urgent. The room fell silent, then erupted with applause. Harris didn바카라t hold back on the reality of six-week bans, either, adding, 바카라Most women don바카라t even know they바카라re pregnant at six weeks.바카라
The audience nodded and murmured in agreement. This message resonates deeply with young women, who see abortion as not just a healthcare issue but as a fundamental component of their everyday lives and independence.
바카라It바카라s not just about choosing a school anymore. It바카라s about choosing a state where I have control over my body. I left Texas because I want to build my future somewhere that respects my rights, not somewhere that takes them away바카라.
What I바카라ve seen in my travels is that young women are not just reacting바카라they are making significant life decisions based on access to reproductive healthcare. Over 70 per cent of high school seniors report considering access to abortion when deciding where to attend college.
Similarly, two-thirds of young workers say they wouldn바카라t want to live in a state with an abortion ban, while 60 per cent of young women are considering relocating from states with restrictive laws or would if further restrictions are imposed. Among women voters of reproductive age, Harris holds a two-to-one advantage over Trump in trust to handle abortion policy.
At Washington Square Park, I met a college student originally from Texas, sitting on a bench beneath the shade of a sprawling tree. The noise of street musicians and the chatter of NYU students surrounded us as she spoke candidly about her decision to study in New York.
바카라It바카라s not just about choosing a school anymore,바카라 she explained, clutching her backpack strap casually. 바카라It바카라s about choosing a state where I have control over my own body. I left Texas because I want to build my future somewhere that respects my rights, not somewhere that takes them away.바카라
For her and millions of others, the 2024 election isn바카라t just about picking a president바카라it바카라s about defining the kind of country America will be.
While the muffled halls of the Carafem clinic and the words on the clinic바카라s website바카라It바카라s with a heavy heart that we바카라ve closed this much-needed in-office abortion procedure at this clinic바카라serve as a stark symbol of what has been lost, they also embody what바카라s at stake in 2024. The young clinic worker at the front desk told me that 바카라our efforts to keep the clinic running to provide online consultations and other reproductive health services reflect the depth of the struggle, and our resolve to ensure that the country moves forward, not backward바카라.
This struggle isn바카라t new. The drive to control women바카라s bodies and limit their choices mirrors tactics used by authoritarian regimes throughout history to reinforce traditional social hierarchies.
By restricting reproductive rights, political forces aim to reassert traditional family structures, making male authority seem 바카라natural바카라 at home and extending this logic to the broader state.
Adolf Hitler argued that Germany바카라s defeat in World War I was partly due to men losing their masculinity, which he attributed to losing control over women. He blamed the Weimar Republic바카라s efforts to emancipate women by providing access to childcare, higher education, better jobs and political participation. As part of his campaign to restore male supremacy, he vowed to return women to their traditional roles of 바카라kinder, küche, kirche바카라 (children, kitchen, church), framing these roles as essential to national restoration and reinforcing male authority.
Franco바카라s Spain and Ceaușescu바카라s Romania used similar tactics, reinforcing traditional roles and curbing reproductive rights to maintain social order and state control.
In the US today, the Republican nominee for Vice-President J.D. Vance바카라s rhetoric about women finding happiness only as homemakers may not be as overtly fascistic, but the underlying strategy is similar바카라using reproductive control to normalise hierarchy. Trump바카라s campaign, while less explicit, taps into similar fears of declining traditional masculinity. By restricting women바카라s reproductive rights, he aims to restore a sense of order and control, appealing to voters who feel economically marginalised but still seek power through gender dominance.
Meanwhile, inflation continues to rank as the number one concern for women voters overall. It remains a high priority for Black (51 per cent) and Hispanic (41 per cent) women, who are grappling with rising household expenses, from groceries to rent. But there바카라s a notable shift among voters of colour바카라in a flip from earlier this summer, many are now giving Harris the edge over Trump when it comes to managing rising costs. The tie between economic stability and reproductive rights is not lost on voters. As costs rise and wages stagnate, the ability to control the timing and size of one바카라s family becomes even more crucial.
(Views expressed are personal)
Ruchira Gupta is an Emmy-winning documentarian and author of I Kick and I fly
This story was published as part of Outlook's 11 November, 2024 magazine issue with the title 'Roe, Roe, Roe Your Vote'. To read more stories from the issue, click here