Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Worries Rise Pentagon Abortion Access Policy Could Be Forced To Change
The Pentagon鈥檚 former personnel head warned that the Defense Department鈥檚 abortion access policies could be rescinded as early as next year if critics win key seats in the upcoming November elections. 鈥淭he Department of Defense鈥檚 abortion travel policy was a necessary, though incomplete, step to remedying the Supreme Court鈥檚 error. It also could be reversed on the very first day of a new administration,鈥 wrote Gil Cisneros, the former undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, in an op-ed published by The Hill on Tuesday. (Shane III, 1/3)
The commander of the Arkansas Air National Guard鈥檚 188th Air Wing resigned late last month for what the state鈥檚 Governor said is a protest of the Pentagon policy that pays for reproductive medical expenses, which includes out-of-state travel for abortions. According to Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders鈥 office, Colonel Dillon Patterson resigned on December 18 as commander of the 188th Air Wing at Ebbing Air National Guard Base just, just outside the town of Fort Smith on the Oklahoma border. (Schogol and White, 1/3)
In other abortion news 鈥
With the measure's supporters getting close to meeting a petition-signature requirement, the Florida Supreme Court on Wednesday said it will hear arguments on February 7th about a proposed constitutional amendment aimed at ensuring abortion rights in the state. The arguments will center on whether the Supreme Court should approve the wording of the proposed constitutional amendment and allow it to go on the November ballot. (1/3)
While Republicans have made inroads with Latino voters in recent years, Democrats say the GOP鈥檚 support for strict limits on abortion threatens to undercut those gains. A majority of Hispanics, 57 percent, say abortion should be legal in most or all cases, according to a Pew Research Center survey released in 2022. Among young Latinos, one of the nation鈥檚 fastest-growing demographic groups, that figure climbs to 72 percent. Support for reproductive rights remains strong even among Catholic Latinos. Polling data from eight key states compiled by UnidosUS, a Hispanic civil rights organization, found that 71 percent of Latinos opposed efforts to make abortion illegal or 鈥渢ake that choice away from everyone else,鈥 regardless of their personal beliefs. (Altimari, 1/2)
Abortion bans may have led to an increase in birth rates in some states, a new report suggests. Three university researchers closely analyzed 13 states that prohibited abortion in nearly all situations by the end of 2022, after the U.S. Supreme Court eliminated a federal right to abortion. The IZA Institute of Labor Economics published their discussion paper in November. (Watkins, 1/3)