March for Life abortion opponents hit the streets in Virginia March for Life

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Attendees of Virginia March For Life in downtown Richmond on April 22, 2026. (Photo by Charlotte Rene Woods/Virginia Mercury)

As the governor, advocates and lawmakers celebrated the new maternal health laws inside the Patrick Henry Building Wednesday morning, about 1,000 people gathered outside for the Virginia March for Life

Hosted with support from the Family Foundation, the annual event draws parents, children, political activists and faith leaders from around the state. Featured speakers this year emphasized their opposition to a reproductive rights amendment that will appear on statewide ballots in November.

The proposal cleared the state legislature two years in a row and now needs voters’ final approval to pass. As the least restrictive Southern state when it comes to abortion access, approving the measure can make protections less subject to partisan turnover in the legislature, executive mansion or federal authorities.

“Once it becomes enshrined in our constitution it becomes harder to fight,” Family Foundation president Victoria Cobb said. “We are not just fighting against something, we are fighting for something.”

Virginia’s pending amendment only advanced this far because of Democratic control of the legislature. Republicans, like several March For Life speakers, have countered that the amendment would erode parental consent laws for minors seeking the procedure and allow abortions late in pregnancy.

While the amendment does not address minors’ abilities to obtain abortions or contraception, existing state law allows minors to get contraception but prohibits them from getting any surgery, including like abortions or sterilization, without approval from parents or guardians or a successful judicial grant. State lawmakers have emphasized how those state laws would still hold should the amendment pass.

Though third trimester abortions are rare, the amendment would allow limited access to them and would apply a legal structure called “strict scrutiny” for instance where challenges may arise.

Former Planned Parenthood employee Mayra Rodriguez fired up the crowd before they marched around Capitol Square. Rodriguez was fired from an Arizona clinic after lodging complaints against a particular doctor there and won a wrongful termination lawsuit. Now dubbed a “Planned Parenthood whistleblower” by the march’s organizers, she described working in the clinic as being more about profit than about health care.

Rodriquez also reflected on Tuesday’s redistricting referendum, which passed by narrow margins Tuesday, making Virginia the latest state to redraw congressional maps ahead of this year’s midterm elections.

“What happened yesterday matters. Elections matter. Showing up to the polls matters,” she said. “So we cannot just march today, we must be ready for tomorrow.”

As congressional campaigns ramp up through the remainder of the year, so will campaigns both for and against the reproductive rights amendment.

March for Life attendees heading to the state Capitol in Richmond, April 22, 2026. (Photo by Charlotte Rene Woods/Virginia Mercury)

Reproductive rights advocates Sarah Kolick and Clare Strahler came with an “abortion is healthcare” sign and marched alongside the opposing crowd. Whenever the crowd would chant “we love the babies, we love the mamas,” Kolick and Strahler would cite women who have died amid pregnancy complications in states with abortion bans.

As the demonstration concluded, organizers directed the crowd to an anti-abortion advocacy training session at the nearby Greater Richmond Convention Center following the march.

“Let’s be louder than the other side,” Rodriquez said.

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