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Monday, Nov 27 2023

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Nevada Reproductive Rights Ballot Initiative Blocked By District Judge

A newly formed PAC filed a lawsuit last month to block a petition that had been seeking to enshrine reproductive rights, including abortion, in Nevada's constitution. District Judge James T. Russell has now sided with the PAC. Other abortion-related news is from Ohio, Arizona, D.C., and elsewhere.

A judge in Nevada rejected a proposed 2024 ballot initiative that sought to enshrine reproductive rights, including abortion, in the state鈥檚 constitution. Siding with a newly established PAC 鈥 the Coalition for Parents and Children PAC 鈥 which filed a lawsuit last month to block the petition, District Judge James T. Russell deemed the proposed ballot initiative to be too broad, embracing a 鈥渕ultitude of subjects that amount to logrolling.鈥 (Shepherd, 11/23)

Ohioans passed a proposed constitutional amendment earlier this month that enshrines abortion rights protections 鈥 seen as a major feat in a state that has trended increasingly red聽in recent years. 聽Abortion rights advocates are now looking to amend state constitutions in states such as Nevada, Arizona聽and Florida in聽an聽effort to聽establish聽or strengthen existing abortion protections聽鈥 an effort that could energize Democrats鈥 base of voters聽in a critical presidential election year.聽(Vakil, 11/25)

Ohio鈥檚 Catholic bishops spent $1.7 million in an attempt to defeat an abortion-rights measure that passed easily on Nov. 7, according to an analysis by a group of Catholics that urges the church to change its stance on the issue.聽The expenditure mostly comes from donations by a laity most of whom disagree with the bishops鈥 stance that abortion is wrong in just about every circumstance. (Schladen, 11/27)

麻豆女优 Health News: Progressive And Anti-Abortion? New Group Plays Fast And Loose To Make Points

This summer pedestrians, drivers, and passengers in Washington, D.C., saw a new type of graffiti among the usual urban scrawls: anti-abortion advocacy designed to troll this ultra-blue city. On sidewalks, on bridge overpasses, and near Metro stations some people had stenciled or spray-painted missives like 鈥淏e Gay: Ban Abortion鈥 and, in stylized lettering, 鈥淎bortion Is Murder.鈥 The messaging was likely a shock in Washington. The graffiti reflects part of a surprising segment of the ideological spectrum: anti-abortion using the language of the radical left. (Tahir, 11/27)

In other reproductive health news 鈥

麻豆女优 Health News: Backlash To Affirmative Action Hits Pioneering Maternal Health Program For Black Women

For Briana Jones, a young Black mother in San Francisco, a city program called the Abundant Birth Project has been a godsend. Designed to counter the 鈥渙bstetric racism鈥 that researchers say leads a disproportionate number of African American mothers to die from childbirth, the project has provided 150 pregnant Black and Pacific Islander San Franciscans a $1,000 monthly stipend. (Cohen, 11/24)

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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