Democrats counted on a backlash against overturning Roe v. Wade to propel Vice President Harris into the White House. This was the first presidential election since the Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision that ended Roe and returned abortion law to the states.
Newly released statistics from 2023 show that minors in Texas are traveling out of the state to have abortions and the numbers are rising.
Anti-abortion lawmakers rallied for the march for life at the Statehouse on Kansas Day, despite expletive-filled yelling from a Satanist heckler.
We’re often told progress isn’t linear, but "abortion" being removed from the Health and Human Services Department's site is undeniably pretty disheartening.
Most analysts blame the economy for that, but the party’s central emphasis on abortion rights probably made it more difficult for voters to identify Harris with her economic agenda. Nearly eight in 10 voters who named the economy as their top issue voted for Donald Trump, while only 23% of voters named abortion as one of their top three issues.
RFK Jr.'s stance on abortion has shifted over the years, from advocating for term limits, to leaving it up to the mother, to focusing on fetal viability.
Jan. 22 marked the 52nd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that enshrined abortion as a federal constitutional right.
Tuesday would have been the 52nd anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that guaranteed a nationwide right to abortion.
One of the Trump administration’s actions that supporters of abortion rights found most alarming — and that opponents were quick to celebrate — was tucked into an executive order that had nothing to do with abortion at all.
Trump’s nominee for HHS secretary said he supported policies that restrict abortion and said he didn’t know whether federal law allows emergency abortions in states that ban the procedure.
Ilyse Hogue explains the connection between Trump's executive order on gender and Republican's anti-abortion agenda.
Protesters held signs advocating for making abortion legal at the intersection of Central Avenue and Third Street in downtown St. Pete.