Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Recount Affirms Kansas Abortion Vote As Campaign Donors Are Revealed
Kansas reaffirmed its landslide vote to uphold abortion rights after election officials on Sunday finished a recount that never had any chance of changing the outcome but was sought by an election denier and anti-abortion activist advancing baseless allegations of fraud. (Bernard and Shorman, 8/21)
Abortion opponents and abortion rights advocates together spent more than $22 million on a ballot question this month in Kansas, and famed film director and producer Steven Spielberg contributed to the successful effort to affirm abortion rights. Finance reports filed by 40 groups and individuals with the state as of this week showed that abortion rights supporters spent $11.3 million on their campaign to defeat a proposed amendment to the Kansas Constitution to allow the Republican-controlled Legislature to further restrict or ban abortion. Abortion opponents who pushed the measure spent nearly $11.1 million. (Hanna and Hollingsworth, 8/19)
In other election news 鈥
Democrat Pat Ryan did not mince words in laying out his version of the stakes in Tuesday's New York state special congressional election, telling supporters that Republican attacks on abortion are contributing to an "existential" threat to U.S. democracy. "This is not the country I fought to defend, when the government is telling women what to do with their bodies, and ripping away their rights," Ryan, an Army combat veteran, told several dozen Democratic supporters last week at a Woodstock home overlooking the Catskill Mountains about 100 miles (160 km) north of New York City. (Ax, 8/21)
When the Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative majority overturned Roe v. Wade, Democrats here quickly mobilized to make the Aug. 23 special election for the U.S. House a referendum on abortion rights. After the decision, Democratic nominee Pat Ryan unveiled new campaign signs, white on pink, that read 鈥淐HOICE IS ON THE BALLOT.鈥 The state Democratic Party鈥檚 own signs show a red slash over 鈥淩oe v. Wade鈥 with the message: 鈥淭his is what happens when YOU don鈥檛 vote! Vote blue in 鈥22!鈥 To Ryan, the 40-year old Democratic Ulster County executive, the strategy was clear: 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to continue to focus on an issue that affects tens of millions of women and people and families.鈥 (Weigel, 8/22)
KHN: Abortion Is Shaking Up Attorneys General Races And Exposing Limits To Their Powers
As the country grapples with states鈥 newfound power to regulate abortion in the aftermath of this summer鈥檚 U.S. Supreme Court decision, state attorney general candidates are staking claims on what they鈥檒l do to fight or defend access to abortion 鈥 and that鈥檚 attracting cash and votes. 鈥淏y pretty much every indicator there is in a campaign, the Dobbs decision has energized and supercharged our race,鈥 said Kris Mayes, a Democrat running for attorney general in Arizona. 鈥淧eople are outraged about this, and you can feel it in the air.鈥 (Weber and Whitehead, 8/19)
In other news about reproductive rights 鈥
Walmart, the nation鈥檚 largest employer, is expanding its abortion coverage for employees after staying largely mum on the issue following the Supreme Court ruling that scrapped a nationwide right to abortion. In a memo sent to employees on Friday, the company said its health care plans will now cover abortion for employees 鈥渨hen there is a health risk to the mother, rape or incest, ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage or lack of fetal viability.鈥 (Hadero, 8/19)
A murky online market for abortion pills is thriving as some U.S. states tighten abortion restrictions. Dozens of websites state they ship abortion drugs anywhere in the U.S. without a prescription, which violates Food and Drug Administration rules. Most of the sites don鈥檛 clearly state who operates them or where they get the pills. The operator of one website said demand for abortion pills has surged since the Supreme Court removed constitutional protection for abortion in June. (Mosbergen and Agarwal, 8/21)
KHN: Policies To Roll Back Abortion Rights Will Hit Incarcerated People Particularly Hard
Policies governing abortion and reproductive health care services in U.S. prisons and jails were restrictive and often hostile even before the Supreme Court removed Roe v. Wade鈥檚 constitutional protections for abortions. After the June ruling, many reproductive services stand to be prohibited altogether, putting the health of incarcerated women who are pregnant at risk. That threat is particularly urgent in states where lawmakers have made clear their intentions to roll back abortion rights. (Graf, 8/22)