Shouts of "My body! My choice!" clashed with "Abortion is violence" as rival demonstrators for and against abortion rights faced off outside the US Supreme Court for a second day on Tuesday.

Crowds have been gathering in front of the Washington building since the leak of a draft ruling suggesting the court is poised to overturn the nationwide right to an abortion -- something feared or hoped for by those on either side of the hot-button issue in the United States.

"I'll fight it with every breath I have," said Lynn Hart, a retired grandmother of four in her 70s, who said she had an abortion as a teenager -- before the landmark 1973 Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade made the procedure a constitutionally protected right.

A young woman stamped sheets of paper with 'My body, my choice,' before hanging them from a fence in front of the US Supreme Court taped to wire hangers -- in reference to dangerous methods once used in illegal abortions
A young woman stamped sheets of paper with 'My body, my choice,' before hanging them from a fence in front of the US Supreme Court taped to wire hangers -- in reference to dangerous methods once used in illegal abortions AFP / Brendan SMIALOWSKI

She had another abortion when it was legal -- a decision she and her husband made together and one she is "horrified" could be "stripped away from my grandsons and granddaughters."

Nearby a young woman crouched on her knees as she stamped sheet after sheet of paper with "My body, my choice," before taping them to wire hangers on a fence -- in reference to the dangerous methods used in some illegal abortions before Roe v. Wade.

Mikaela, a 20-year-old from Texas, said she had come "because I don't think the government should have any say over anything that I choose to do with my body."

"Texas and Oklahoma have some of the strictest abortion laws in America. And so I think we've been kind of sounding the alarm for a while longer than the rest of the places," she said.

Anti-abortion demonstrators gathered in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington in support of a leaked draft ruling that would overturn the law enshrining the nationwide right to the procedure
Anti-abortion demonstrators gathered in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington in support of a leaked draft ruling that would overturn the law enshrining the nationwide right to the procedure AFP / Brendan SMIALOWSKI

But for a small, vocal crowd decked out in bright capes and stick-on gemstones, banging on black buckets, the draft decision is what they've been hoping for.

Kristin Monaghan, a 30-year-old anti-abortion activist from Seattle who describes herself as a long-time "left-wing feminist pro-lifer" and an atheist, said she'd been skeptical that the conservative-majority court would overturn Roe v. Wade, but now "they're showing themselves a little bit."

A fellow demonstrator with the Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising group, 22-year-old Archie Smith said "there's still a lot of work to be done," but that he was "hoping the justices will side with life."

Demonstrators for abortion rights hold signs in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington protesting a draft ruling that would strike down the nationwide right to abortion
Demonstrators for abortion rights hold signs in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington protesting a draft ruling that would strike down the nationwide right to abortion AFP / Brendan SMIALOWSKI

As the group chanted, sang and drummed, other protesters stood in their midst holding signs reading "Catholics support abortion access."

On an issue often painted as pitting anti-abortion religious conservatives against secular liberals in favor of abortion rights, a spokesman for the organization Catholics for Choice said they came out to "give a voice" to the Catholic majority.

"It's understandable that people would have that misperception about Catholic support for abortion, but we're here to just state the truth, which is that most Catholics are pro-choice," the group's press secretary John Becker told AFP.

Becker emphasized the leaked document was a draft, saying, "No matter what the court decides in June this fight is not over."

US President Joe Biden has already weighed in on the politically explosive issue, urging voters to elect officials who back abortion rights and calling on Congress to enshrine legal abortion in US law, warning that the ruling, if finalized, would have implications beyond abortion.

It's a view shared by one protester, 37-year-old Jen Miller, who worried that the draft ruling could "hurt a lot of marginalized communities."

"This is very much a litmus test of where our country is going to go," said Miller, who works in a bookstore in northern Virginia.

As the noisy crowd swelled to more than 1,000 people, including many members of the media, she showed her anger silently, leaning against a barrier with her back to the imposing marble steps of the country's highest court, one finger up.

"I'm just flicking off the Supreme Court. It just makes me feel better."