(CNN) A coalition of progressive organizations plan to bring the national debate over Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh to voters in 16 key congressional districts on Saturday, organizers from the liberal groups tell CNN, using the national reckoning on sexual assault and the treatment of women as a turnout tool ahead of November's midterm elections.

Planned Parenthood Action Fund, the political arm of the nonprofit reproductive health care organization, Organizing for Action, a group closely tied with former President Barack Obama, and Swing Left, a progressive congressional organization that sprung up out of the election of President Donald Trump in 2016, will have hundreds of organizers knocking doors and working in seven states on Saturday in what the groups are calling a Women's Health Day of Action.

While the groups, particularly Planned Parenthood, have opposed Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court over his views on abortion, the recent spate of news on alleged sexual assault and excessive drinking in the nominee's youth, which culminated in closely watched testimony by professor Christine Blasey Ford and Kavanaugh, has altered the focus of the door knocking with volunteers now looking to draw a direct line between women's health and the allegations against Kavanaugh, which he has denied.

"Women are fed up with politicians dismissing sexual assault survivors, undermining access to Planned Parenthood health centers, and reshaping the Supreme Court to gut the constitutional right to safe, legal abortion," said Dawn Laguens, the executive vice president of Planned Parenthood Action Fund. "Women are poised to serve a reckoning this November that is decades in the making, and this partnership is a signal that we're all right there with them."

Although the debate over Kavanaugh has put the Senate in the spotlight, namely Democrats Joe Manchin and Heidi Heitkamp, Republican and Democratic operatives alike believe that the impacts of the national conversation on Ford's allegations could most directly impact key House races that are being fought in the suburbs of America's largest cities.

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