Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Abortion Rights Ballot Effort In Arkansas Thwarted By Republican AG
A proposed constitutional amendment ensuring a limited right to abortion in Arkansas will not appear on the 2024 statewide ballot, Attorney General Tim Griffin wrote in a Tuesday opinion. His seven-page letter to Steven Nichols, the Arkansan who submitted the proposal, pointed out several aspects of the ballot language that Griffin said need clarity or other improvements before he can consider it worthy of approval. (Vrbin, 11/28)
Abortion updates from Texas 鈥
Several of the Texas Supreme Court鈥檚 Republican justices appeared hesitant on Tuesday to clarify an emergency exception in the state鈥檚 abortion ban despite claims from nearly two dozen women that they were forced to continue medically dangerous pregnancies.聽鈥淥ur job is to decide cases, not to elaborate and expand laws in order to make them easier to understand or enforce,鈥 Justice Brett Busby said. (Goldenstein, 11/28)
Lawyers in the Texas attorney general鈥檚 office said Tuesday that women should sue their doctors, not the state, over a lack of access to abortion in defending the state鈥檚 strict law.聽Beth Klusmann of the Texas Attorney General鈥檚 Office made that point in oral arguments before the state Supreme Court in a case challenging Texas鈥檚 abortion ban, which bars doctors from providing abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected 鈥 typically around six weeks into pregnancy 鈥 with exceptions only for cases in which the life of the mother is at risk.聽(Elbein, 11/28)
In other abortion developments 鈥
Health workers in Illinois are performing about 1,800 more abortions per month on average than before the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, according to data compiled by the Society for Family Planning, a health worker-led nonprofit that advocates for abortion rights. Missouri and many other states banned the procedure after the court鈥檚 June 2022 ruling. But the report found the number of abortions nationwide increased slightly, fueled in part by people seeking the procedure in Illinois and other states that didn鈥檛 institute bans. (Fentem, 11/28)
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Tuesday he would not sign a six-week federal abortion ban as president because he does not believe such legislation aligns with the views of the American public. 鈥淥ne thing I know for sure is there is no consensus around a six-week abortion ban nationally,鈥 the GOP presidential candidate said Tuesday on 鈥淐NN This Morning,鈥 pointing to recent victories at the ballot box for supporters of abortion rights since the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling was overturned last year. (Main, 11/28)
Supreme Court justices are slated to delve into disputes surrounding abortion during their final session this year, revealing the legal battlefronts forming in the wake of the high court鈥檚 stunning decision that overturned Roe v. Wade. Several key cases are headed to the justices. One is Idaho鈥檚 emergency request to fully enforce its abortion law, a ruling that is possible as soon as this week. At the justices鈥 Friday conference, they are scheduled to consider whether to take up an appeal seeking to overturn a Supreme Court precedent allowing laws that ban anti-abortion activists from approaching people outside abortion clinics. (Schonfeld, 11/29)