Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Wis. GOP Makes Mockery Of Governor's Request For Abortion Referendum
Wisconsin鈥檚 Republican-controlled Legislature took mere seconds on Tuesday to reject Democratic Gov. Tony Evers鈥 call to create a way for voters to get a chance to repeal the state鈥檚 1849 abortion ban, even as Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson voiced support for letting the people decide the issue. The move by Evers is the latest by Democrats in the battleground state to turn the Nov. 8 election into a referendum on abortion. But Evers鈥 opponent Tim Michels, Johnson and other Republicans are focusing instead on crime and public safety in arguing that Democrats have failed to keep the state safe. (Bauer, 10/4)
The Arizona Medical Association and a physician filed a lawsuit Tuesday, asking a court to provide clarity amid what they say is "significant confusion" over the state's abortion laws. (El-Bawab and DiMartino, 10/5)
A federal judge on Tuesday ordered Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to testify in a lawsuit over the ability of abortion funds to help people access the procedure in states where it's still legal. (Goldenstein, 10/4)
The ACLU receives a $3 million gift from Sheryl Sandberg 鈥
Sheryl Sandberg, who once sparred with the American Civil Liberties Union, is now one of its biggest benefactors, providing a $3 million grant to boost its political activities around access to abortion. 鈥淭his is as important as any civil liberty a woman can have, which is the right to control her own medical path, the right to choose when she has children,鈥 the former Meta Platforms Inc. chief operating officer, who has three teenage daughters, said in a Zoom interview from California last week. (Larson, 10/4)
In election updates on the issue of abortion 鈥
Months before news broke alleging that Herschel Walker paid for an abortion, top Republicans in the state 鈥 including those advising his team 鈥 warned him that the story could torpedo his campaign. Four people with knowledge of those preliminary discussions said that the abortion issue was well known within the state, even before reporters began inquiring about it. (McGraw, Allisonand Stein, 10/4)
Former Gov. Paul LePage said he would veto a 15-week abortion ban in a first debate with Gov. Janet Mills on Tuesday that featured feisty exchanges on the economy and the opioid crisis ahead of their high-profile November election. (Shepherd, 10/4)
A spokesman for Kari Lake said Tuesday the Republican candidate for Arizona governor didn鈥檛 mean to suggest abortion should be legal, saying she鈥檚 not calling for changes to abortion laws weeks after a judge ruled that prosecutors can enforce a near-total ban on terminating pregnancies. In her most expansive comments on abortion since the ruling last month, Lake told a Phoenix talk radio host that it should be 鈥渞are and legal鈥 before saying twice that it should be 鈥渞are but safe.鈥 Ross Trumble, a spokesman for Lake, said she meant to say only 鈥渞are but safe.鈥 (Cooper, 10/4)
Democratic candidates are ramping up messaging on reproductive health in races for governor and attorney general as they capitalize on renewed interest in protecting access to abortion and contraception ahead of the 2022 midterm elections. (Raman, 10/4)