Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

Poland votes down an extreme abortion ban after thousands of women go on strike

(AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

In Poland on Monday, thousands of women in 60 cities went on strike, dressed in all black, and protested in the streets against a proposal to ban all abortion in Poland with no exceptions.

And on Thursday Poland’s parliament voted down the controversial bill, 352 to 58.

Remarkably, the Guardian reported Wednesday, the so-called “Black Monday” protests seem to have really worked in convincing Poland’s conservative government to reject the ban. Jarosław Gowin, Poland’s minister of science and higher education, said that the protests had “caused us to think and taught us humility.”

It’s important to note that in Poland, abortion is already mostly illegal. The only exceptions are for rape, incest, danger to a woman’s life or health, or a serious fetal abnormality — and many doctors still refuse to perform abortion even in those limited circumstances.

Poland’s existing laws are so restrictive that last year, the international abortion rights organization Women on Web launched the first-ever “abortion drone” to deliver abortion medication from Germany to Poland in a way that circumvented Poland’s laws. It was mostly a publicity stunt and a proof of concept, but it also called attention to the fact that most women in Poland have no safe, legal abortion options in practice.

But the proposed total ban in Poland would have been much worse. It would criminalize abortions in all cases with no exceptions — and it would also threaten women with jail if they seek abortion, which isn’t currently the case in Poland.

In practice, that would also mean throwing women in jail for miscarriages — which is already the case not just in countries like El Salvador, where abortion is banned, but also occasionally in America, where abortion is supposed to be legal.

Especially when they’re induced by medication, abortions are medically similar to a miscarriage. So if law enforcement suspects that a woman who had a miscarriage really gave herself an abortion, there isn’t a lot she can do to defend herself.

Reproductive rights advocates have been fighting hard against severe abortion bans abroad — especially in Latin American countries afflicted with the Zika virus, which causes serious birth defects. In some of those countries, Zika has led to an increase in women seeking self-induced abortions — but efforts to relax local laws haven’t been too successful.

So it’s pretty remarkable that the protest in Poland has had such an immediate, decisive impact.

See More:

More in Abortion

Politics
The culture war is consuming the Supreme CourtThe culture war is consuming the Supreme Court
Politics

Guns, God, gays, and abortion dominate the Trump era Supreme Court’s docket.

By Ian Millhiser
Supreme Court
What the Supreme Court did to America while all eyes were on TrumpWhat the Supreme Court did to America while all eyes were on Trump
Supreme Court

Trying to keep track of all the chaos is overwhelming. So here’s a one-stop guide to the turmoil this Court caused.

By Ian Millhiser
Abortion
Confusing abortion bans hurt patients. But there’s a cost to making them clearer.Confusing abortion bans hurt patients. But there’s a cost to making them clearer.
Abortion

What the debate over “clarification” laws reveals about America three years out from Roe.

By Rachel Cohen Booth
Politics
The Republican spending bill is a disaster for reproductive rightsThe Republican spending bill is a disaster for reproductive rights
Politics

How Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” attacks abortion and reproductive care, in 2 charts.

By Nicole Narea
Supreme Court
The Supreme Court’s disastrous new abortion decision, explainedThe Supreme Court’s disastrous new abortion decision, explained
Supreme Court

The Republican justices just nuked much of federal Medicaid law, in order to spite Planned Parenthood.

By Ian Millhiser