Michelle Obama hits the trail, warning what a Trump presidency would mean for women’s health

The Saturday event in Michigan marked the former first lady’s first appearance on the 2024 campaign trail alongside Vice President Kamala Harris.

In her first stop on 2024 campaign trail, former first lady Michelle Obama delivered an urgent message to men, arguing that the election could have life or death consequences for the women they love.

“I am asking y’all from the core of my being to take our lives seriously,” she said at a rally for Vice President Kamala Harris in Kalamazoo, Michigan.

The former first lady praised Harris’ credentials and urged voter turnout and engagement in her speech. But she devoted significant time, laden with emotion, to arguing that there would be dire consequences for the future of women’s health if former President Donald Trump, who spent Saturday campaigning in Michigan and Pennsylvania, were elected once more.

“To the men who love us, let me just try to paint a picture of what it will feel like if America, the wealthiest nation on earth, keeps revoking basic care from its women and how it will affect every single woman in your life,” Obama said.

Obama argued a woman affected by the policies could be “in legal jeopardy if she needs a pill from out of state or overseas, or if she has to travel across state lines because the local clinic closed up.”

“Your daughter could be the one too terrified to call the doctor if she’s bleeding during an unexpected pregnancy. Your niece could be the one miscarrying in her bathtub after the hospital turned her away,” she continued.

“And this will not just affect women; it will affect you and your sons,” she said, suggesting both men and women would suffer from “the devastating consequences of teen pregnancy.”

Michelle Obama speaks at a campaign rally in Kalamazoo, Mich., on Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024 for Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris.Brendan Smialowski / AFP-Getty Images

Obama expanded beyond abortion, suggesting that increasingly limited access to types of women’s health care could also have serious ramifications for miscarriage care, cancer screenings and access to medical professionals.

“Your wife or mother could be the ones at higher risk of dying from undiagnosed cervical cancer because they have no access to regular gynecological care,” she said.

“And then there is the tragic but very real possibility that in the worst case scenario, you just might be the one holding flowers at the funeral,” she later added. “You might be the one left to raise your children alone.”

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