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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Jun 28 2022

Full Issue

'This Is An Emergency': Democrats Press Biden To Protect Abortion

Members of the president's party are frustrated by his seeming lack of action. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch covers strong words from Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.), who said the situation warranted that the Biden administration "declare the attack on abortion rights a public health emergency."

When it comes to protecting abortion rights, Democrats want Joe Biden to get aggressive. And fast. Frustration is building among liberals over what some see as a slow executive response from the president, despite weeks to prepare following POLITICO鈥檚 publication of a draft majority opinion forecasting the Supreme Court鈥檚 overturning of Roe v. Wade. White House officials contend that things are more complicated than they seem, but that鈥檚 doing little to turn down the temperature in the party. (Everett, Ferris, Cancryn and Lemire, 6/27)

Congressional Democrats are pressuring President Biden to take aggressive steps to protect abortion rights after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, pinning their hopes for now on executive action because of the near impossibility of passing national legislation to stop bans in Republican-controlled states. But despite a push that began weeks ago after a leaked draft court opinion, Biden has taken only limited steps since the decision was released Friday to preserve women鈥檚 access to abortion. He vowed to protect the rights of women to travel to another state to seek an abortion and to access federally approved abortion medication through the mail, but has stopped short of issuing executive actions that would put him in direct conflict with GOP-led states and potentially the Supreme Court, such as offering abortions on federal property. (Puzzanghera, 6/27)

U.S. Rep. Cori Bush on Monday called on President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration to declare a 鈥減ublic health emergency鈥 in response to the U.S. Supreme Court ruling allowing states to outlaw abortion. 鈥淭his is an emergency, and it demands an emergency response,鈥 Bush said at a news conference in Mayor Tishaura O. Jones鈥 office. 鈥淭his is why I鈥檓 calling on the administration to declare the attack on abortion rights a public health emergency.鈥 Bush, D-St. Louis, said the administration should use its executive authority to 鈥渙pen up resources for abortion services鈥 and expand and protect access to abortion pills. (Schlinkmann, 6/27)

A senior White House official said Biden is simply being honest with the public about what he can do unilaterally, adding that the president is 鈥渢aking major actions under executive authority as he fights this extreme decision very hard 鈥 but being clear and honest that only Congress can fix the situation.鈥 White House officials note that the administration has moved to protect access to the so-called abortion pill even in states that try to ban it, and that the president has pledged to protect women who seek to travel across state lines to get an abortion. (Abutaleb, Wootson Jr. and Sotomayor, 6/27)

In other abortion news from the Biden administration 鈥

The White House signaled Monday that it is not pursuing a Senate Democratic proposal that says the Biden administration could offer abortion services on federal lands after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last week. Just days after the court ruled to strike down the landmark 1973 decision that guaranteed abortion rights nationwide, a White House official said that the Democratic proposal was 鈥渨ell-intentioned鈥 but that it 鈥渃ould put women and providers at risk.鈥 (Lederman and Richards, 6/27)

Vice President Kamala Harris said Monday that the Supreme Court鈥檚 decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the landmark decision legalizing abortion, is likely to endanger other rights, including those of gay marriage and birth control. She said Justice Clarence Thomas, who cast doubt on those rights in a concurring opinion, was merely saying 鈥渢he quiet part out loud鈥 as the court鈥檚 conservative wing increasingly asserts itself. (Brewster, 6/27)

In other political news 鈥

In the days after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Democrats at rallies and protests in Texas said the November election is key for protecting reproductive rights. In an interview after a Sunday rally in Austin, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Beto O鈥橰ourke told The Texas Tribune he would work to repeal Texas鈥 abortion ban and expand access to reproductive health care if he is elected. Rochelle Garza, the Democratic nominee for attorney general, said she would partner with other lawyers to stop enforcement of the state鈥檚 abortion laws. (Dey, 6/27)

Mitch McConnell is indisputably a chief architect 鈥 if not the chief architect 鈥 of the conservative court that has shaken the nation over the past week with a string of rulings on abortion, guns and religion 鈥 a trifecta of searing cultural issues. While much of the public recoiled at the decisions and the prospect of more to come in the years ahead, Mr. McConnell, a deep admirer of Justice Antonin Scalia, saw the culmination of a personal push to reshape the court in the image of the conservative judicial icon. Mr. McConnell said his goal had been 鈥渢o move us back to where Scalia would have taken us to a textualist, originalist majority. And we have that for the first time in history.鈥 (Hulse, 6/27)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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