“It’s important to note the impact on how this affects Americans and their rights to privacy on so many different issues,” a White House official told CNN. Roundtable. In the wake of the draft leak, Harris has focused on the issue of privacy in an effort to explain the far-reaching implications that Americans could face if the abortion decision were overturned. “I believe that when we look at the challenge we will face when this decision is rejected, part of it will be that it will directly, if not indirectly, affect other privacy rights, including the right of access to contraception and the right to marry the individual. “You love,” Harris said at a meeting with members of the clergy on abortion rights last week. Organizing this kind of event has made Harris one, if not the main, messenger in the Biden government about abortion rights. Despite the absence of an official opinion, Harris is currently seizing to host public talks with various players in the battle for abortion rights. CNN previously reported that Harris was informed from outside the White House that leading the charge against any abortion decision could help her connect with voters the party now needs and would need for an expected future presidency. . with business in her office told CNN. Last week, Harris hosted an event in Los Angeles with faith and clergy leaders to discuss the issue of abortion rights. Days after the draft opinion was leaked in May, Harris met with doctors and nurses whose work would be directly affected by the reversal of a previous decision. And he gave an inflatable speech on the subject, asking loudly at an Emily’s List gala: “How dare they? How dare they tell a woman what she can and cannot do with her body?” Tuesday’s event, an official told CNN, will be based on Harris’ ability to bring a wide range of people together to work on specific issues. “What is important to keep in mind here is that some of the vice president’s goals were really to ensure that people in this country have an understanding of what is at stake here,” the official said. “And that takes a little work to understand the coalition of people who are affected by it, who are interested in having their voices heard.” Harris will meet with law professors Peggy Cooper Davis and Melissa Murray of New York University, Glenn Cohen of Harvard Law School and Michelle Bratcher Goodwin of the University of California-Irvine, among others. An official warned that if Roe was overthrown, other rights that could arise would be the underlying right to marry “someone you love”, discussions about “access to your own data” and access to contraception. These issues, they say, will be reflected by those present at Tuesday’s roundtable. “She wants to make the connection,” said President Joe Biden, referring to the impact Roe could have on a woman’s choice in the event of a reversal, a second official said. If this right is overturned, the Biden government is looking for options for what it could do in return. Biden said last week that he was weighing the enforcement measures he could take if the court ruling reflected the plan that leaked and hit Rowe. Options include facilitating travel for women to receive abortions in states where the procedure is still legal or extending access to medical abortion by mail. Some advocates have also suggested leasing federal land for abortion clinics, bypassing state laws restricting them. But in the end, Biden wants a solution through Congress. “I think if the court rejects Roe v. Wade and does what has been written … if that happens, I think we should, we should legislate,” Biden told presenter Jimmy Kimmel late last night. “We need to make sure we pass legislation that will make it a law that the federal government says works that way.”