 For more videos on people's struggles, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. On November 18, thousands of women feminist activists and LGBTQ community members mobilized across Argentina. The rallies were held after Argentine President Alberto Fernandez sent a draft law on November 17 to Congress that aims at legalizing abortion. The protesters urged the legislators to discuss the voluntary termination of pregnancy bill or the IVE bill on an urgent basis. A similar rally was organized on November 17 in front of the National Congress as well. The mobilizations were called for by the national campaign for the right to legal, safe and free abortion. Along with the IVE bill, President Fernandez also sent a thousand-day planned bill. This bill seeks to strengthen healthcare services and nutrition actions for mothers and newborns. The new IVE bill presented by the executive has basic similarities to the one that received the approval of the deputies in June 2018. It has also incorporated some perspectives that reflect the struggle of the feminist movements. Like the 2018 bill stated, the new bill establishes a gestation limit of 14 weeks to carry out the procedure. In addition, it adds that a pregnant person can access an abortion outside this term if her life is in danger or if the pregnancy is the product of rape. Abortion is legal in Argentina only in cases of rape or if the mother's health is in danger. Authorities estimate that every year over 500,000 abortions are performed in unsafe and clandestine conditions. During his election campaign, Fernandez had vowed to support all women and take care of the life and health of those women who decide to terminate their pregnancy. With the presentation of these bills, President Fernandez fulfilled the promise made to hundreds of thousands of women to decriminalize abortion. With the progressive government of Frente de Todos en Power, abortion rights seems within reach and the feminist movements are hopeful about achieving it. President Fernandez's announcements were celebrated massively by women, feminists, social movements, and human rights organizations throughout the country. Argentine and women have been demanding abortion rights for decades. On May 28, 2015, feminist and women activists founded the Nashi campaign for the right to legal, safe and free abortion. Since then, the organization has been at the forefront of the women's struggle for the right to autonomy over their bodies and their lives.