Fair St. Louis festivities returned to downtown St. Louis after a two-year break due to the coronavirus pandemic. Thousands participated in the three-day celebration packed with food and entertainment.
Hundreds of protesters interrupted the fair Monday afternoon as they stopped traffic and marched against a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed Missouri to effectively end the practice of abortion in the state. Demonstrators chanted to onlookers, “Out of the fair, into the streets!”
Lauren Wright, 25, of St. Louis, helped organize the protest and said she is a first-time demonstrator. “I’ve never experienced sorrow and rage like I did last Friday,” she said. “Myself and the other people here, are prepared to spend the next 50 years fighting for our rights and ensuring that democracy and human rights are protected in the United States.”
Wright said the demonstration was scheduled for the Fourth of July to make a point.
“This is the day of Liberty in the United States. Liberty by definition is freedom from restrictive oppressions within society. I would say forcing a woman to give birth when she does not want to is an oppressive restriction that now exists within our society,” she said. “So we don't have liberty; we're here on Independence Day to make a point [that] our rights have been stolen from us and we're not going to tolerate it.”
The protest group eventually entered the fairgrounds near Kiener Plaza. Organizers and abortion care advocates said they will not give up until safe access to abortion care is reinstated.
View scenes from the fair and demonstrations below:
Brian Munoz is a staff photojournalist and multimedia reporter at St. Louis Public Radio. You can reach him by email at bmunoz@stlpr.org and follow his work on Instagram and Twitter at @brianmmunoz.