Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Senate Judiciary Committee Looks Into 'Chaos' After Roe Overturn
The Senate Judiciary Committee dove into the partisan divide on abortion policy Wednesday in the aftermath of last year鈥檚 Supreme Court decision that overturned a constitutional right to an abortion. Committee Chair Richard J. Durbin, D-Ill., framed the patchwork of legal decisions and state legislation on abortion as 鈥渃haos鈥 in the wake of the June decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization. 鈥淟ives have been disrupted, lifesaving health care has been declared illegal, and women have been denied their fundamental liberties,鈥 Durbin said. (Macagnone, 4/26)
In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, one of the five women suing Texas for abortion access blamed the state鈥檚 Republican senators聽for her near-death experience when she was denied reproductive care in the state.聽(Wermund, 4/26)
Sen. Tommy Tuberville鈥檚 (R-Ala.) prolonged hold on the promotions of Pentagon officials is rattling fellow Republicans, who worry the potential cost to national security is starting to outweigh whatever political points Tuberville may be scoring against the Biden administration. 聽Tuberville on Tuesday blocked an effort to advance 184 military promotions and vowed not to back down anytime soon. The Alabama senator began holding up military promotions in February to protest the Department of Defense鈥檚 policy to give service members up to three weeks of leave to obtain abortions or undergo fertility treatments and reimburse their travel costs. 聽(Bolton, 4/27)
In abortion news from Kansas and Florida 鈥
Abortion providers in Kansas will soon face additional criminal penalties if they do not provide care to infants 鈥渂orn alive鈥 in an abortion after lawmakers approved the first anti-abortion bill since voters overwhelmingly opted to retain the state-level right to the procedure last year. The Kansas Legislature voted Wednesday to override Gov. Laura Kelly鈥檚 veto of the bill, which goes beyond existing federal law protecting infants 鈥渂orn alive鈥 in abortions to create new criminal penalties. (Bernard and Barackman, 4/26)
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a strict abortion ban hours after it overwhelmingly passed the Republican-led legislature this month 鈥 yet whether the law can take effect hinges on a case before the state Supreme Court. ... A paragraph in a little-noticed 2004 article by Chief Justice Carlos Mu帽iz, then a private attorney, is now cited by abortion rights advocates in the case before the high court that will ultimately decide the fate of abortion access in the state. (Reinhard and Kitchener, 4/27)