Hillary Clinton marked four years since the fall of Roe v. Wade by drawing attention to one woman’s story. That story puts a very real face on what abortion laws mean for actual people.
On her Instagram account today, Clinton pointed to Samantha Casiano. Casiano is a Texas woman. She sat before a Democratic Senate hearing today and described being forced to carry a non-viable pregnancy to term. Her baby had no chance of surviving outside the womb. Texas law gave her no choice.
Friends, here’s some background. Four years ago today, the Supreme Court issued its ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. That decision struck down Roe v. Wade. The 1973 ruling had protected abortion access for nearly 50 years. The court’s conservative majority opened the door for states to ban or restrict abortion.
Since then, 25 states have done exactly that.
“Four years ago, Trump’s Supreme Court majority took away American women’s right to access abortion by striking down Roe v. Wade,” Clinton wrote on Instagram. “Since then, 25 states have restricted abortion or banned it outright.”
The consequences have been deadly. Clinton wrote that some women have died as a result of these restrictions. Others have suffered serious harm. These aren’t hypothetical outcomes. They’re things that have happened to real people living under abortion bans.
Casiano’s story is one of the clearest examples of that harm. She was pregnant in Texas and received devastating news. Her daughter had a fatal condition with no chance of survival outside the womb. Texas’s abortion ban left her without legal options. She was forced to carry the pregnancy to term, knowing the outcome. Today, she sat before a Senate hearing and told that story on the record.
Clinton asked her followers to read and share Casiano’s testimony. “I hope you’ll read and share her story,” she wrote.
There’s a clear political dimension here. Clinton called the Dobbs court “Trump’s Supreme Court majority.” That framing ties the decision directly to Donald Trump‘s three appointments during his first term. Clinton has been one of the loudest voices on abortion rights since the ruling came down.
Today’s Senate hearing was organized by Democratic senators. It’s part of a broader effort to keep the human cost of abortion restrictions visible to the public. That matters especially in the states with full bans in place.
Casiano’s testimony is a difficult thing to sit with. She carried a pregnancy with no survivable outcome and then walked into a Senate room to describe what that experience was like. That takes real courage.
For real people living in those 25 states, stories like Casiano’s aren’t abstractions or political talking points. They’re happening in hospitals and clinics and homes across the country, right now. Clinton wants more people to understand that, and today she used her platform to push that message a little further.
