Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
20 Democratic Governors Move To Protect Abortion Rights
A group of 20 Democratic members on Tuesday announced they are forming a coalition to protect and expand abortion access in their states as bans continue to be enacted following the fall of Roe v. Wade. (Gonzalez, 2/21)
Organizers, led by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, described the Reproductive Freedom Alliance as a way for governors and their staffs to share best practices and affirm abortion rights for the approximately 170 million Americans who live in the consortium鈥檚 footprint 鈥 and even ensuring services for the remainder of U.S. residents who live in states with more restrictive laws. (Barrow and Mulvihill, 2/21)
Amid attacks on abortion access and other forms of reproductive care across the country, Governor Maura Healey will join 19 other governors to share ideas on how to reinforce reproductive freedoms in their own states. The multistate group, the Reproductive Freedom Alliance, is being formed eight months after the Supreme Court eliminated the constitutional right to an abortion, resulting in millions of Americans losing access to the procedure. (Gross, 2/21)
In news on abortion rights in Ohio, New Mexico 鈥
A proposed amendment to the state constitution would give Ohioans an individual right to abortion modeled after a successful ballot initiative that last year enshrined abortion rights into Michigan鈥檚 state constitution. Backers call the amendment the 鈥淩ight to Reproductive Freedom with Protections for Health and Safety,鈥 according to a written summary they filed Tuesday afternoon with the Ohio Attorney General鈥檚 Office. (Tobias, 2/21)
An effort to place a constitutional amendment protecting abortion rights on the ballot is brewing in Ohio.聽Ohioans for Reproductive Freedom and Ohio Physicians for Reproductive Rights filed paperwork with the state鈥檚 attorney general Tuesday in one of its first steps to try to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution.聽(Calfas, 2/21)
Legislation adopted by the state House late Tuesday would prohibit cities and public schools in New Mexico from interfering with a person鈥檚 access to abortion or gender-affirming care. The proposal, House Bill 7, now advances to the Senate, following an intense, three-hour debate that touched on the rights of teachers, parents and children. (McKay, 2/21)
Meanwhile, on other abortion-related news across the country 鈥
A Texas federal judge on Tuesday refused to set an accelerated trial schedule for a lawsuit by anti-abortion groups seeking to end U.S. sales of the abortion pill mifepristone, in a case that could severely disrupt access to medication abortion nationwide. (Pierson, 2/22)
North Carolina Republican legislative leaders asked on Tuesday to participate in litigation to defend state restrictions on dispensing abortion pills because Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein has made clear he won鈥檛. Lawyers for Senate leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Tim Moore filed papers in federal court asking to enter the case as new defendants, saying someone must be in place to rigorously defend state abortion laws. (Robertson, 2/21)
More people got abortions in Florida last year despite the state's decision to ban the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy, with people traveling from out of state largely fueling the increase. Agency for Health Care Administration data shows 82,192 people got abortions in Florida in 2022, up from 79,817 in 2021. Of those, 6,708 people came from out-of-state, a 38% increase from the year before. (Colombini, 2/21)