Abortion News

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Highlights

  1. On Dobbs Anniversary, Democrats Look to Make the Court a Campaign Issue

    An outside group supporting President Biden is embarking on a million-dollar campaign to focus voters’ attention on the makeup of the Supreme Court.

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    Stand Up America, a Democratic-aligned group, announced a $1 million digital campaign focusing on the importance of the Supreme Court in the presidential election this year.
    CreditTierney L. Cross for The New York Times
  2. In Abortion Cases, Legions of ‘Friends’ Seek to Persuade Supreme Court

    A new study analyzed 50 years of friend-of-the-court briefs and found that abortion opponents were more relentless than their adversaries, with some reflected in the justices’ opinions.

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    Anti-abortion activists in Washington in 1981, eight years after Roe v. Wade. The Supreme Court has received hundreds of friend-of-the-court briefs about abortion in the years since the decision.
    CreditHerbert K. White/Associated Press
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  3. In Montana, Abortion Rights Groups Submit Signatures for Ballot Measure in November

    The measure would affirm the right to abortion in the State Constitution. Democrats hope that it will help Senator Jon Tester in his bid for re-election.

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    Montana would join four other states — Colorado, South Dakota, Florida and New York — with similar ballot measures this fall.
    CreditJanie Osborne for The New York Times
  4. Biden’s Health Secretary Goes West With a Focus on Reproductive Rights

    Xavier Becerra, the health and human services secretary, will travel to states with large Latino populations, including some with key races on the ballot in November.

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    Xavier Becerra, the secretary of health and human services, will visit states across the West, including Arizona, California, Nevada and New Mexico.
    CreditKent Nishimura for The New York Times
  5. Supreme Court Maintains Broad Access to Abortion Pill

    The decision does not eliminate efforts to restrict the availability of the pill.

     By

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday ruled against a group that wanted to limit access to an abortion medication.
    CreditEric Lee/The New York Times

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  1. Six Takeaways From the First Presidential Debate

    In a testy, personal clash, President Biden failed to ease worries about his age, Donald Trump forcefully made his case (with wild claims and exaggerations) and the moderators held their fact-checking fire.

    By Shane Goldmacher and Jonathan Swan

     
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  6. Read the Posted Document

    Bloomberg published a copy of an opinion that appeared briefly on the Supreme Court’s website and seemed to concern an Idaho abortion case.

     
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