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As advocates push this year for ballot measure initiatives aiming to protect abortion rights, key differences have emerged in the language of proposed measures. Among them is the inclusion of mental health exceptions. Meanwhile, proposed ballot measure language in Arkansas only says “physical health,” excluding a mental health exception. “We don’t as a society have a great track record of treating mental health the same way we do physical health.”Policies that dismiss mental health as less important than physical health put lives at risk, said Columbia University psychiatrist Paul Appelbaum. We felt it was unlikely for a version that explicitly names mental health to pass.”Arkansas advocates were also worried the opposition campaign would target a mental health exception, Diaz said.
Persons: Kaniya Harris, Harris, don’t, , , Roe, Wade, Michelle Oberman, ” Oberman, Paul Appelbaum, Appelbaum, ” Jayme Trevino, Mallory Schwarz, , Gennie Diaz, ” Diaz, Diaz, Ingrid Duran, Duran Organizations: CHICAGO, Alabama, U.S, Supreme, U.S . Centers for Disease Control, Santa Clara University, Columbia University, American Psychiatric Association, OB, Physicians for Reproductive Health, Republican, Associated Press, AP Locations: Bethesda , Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Arizona, Michigan, Arkansas, Florida , Montana and Nebraska, — Florida, Georgia , Idaho , Iowa , Kentucky, Louisiana , Ohio , Tennessee, West Virginia, Wyoming, Alabama, ” Arkansas, Santa
This time around, he believes at least one thing is different: Biden can’t win through voters’ fear of Trump alone. Here in Michigan, which the president visited Thursday, rests one of the biggest tests of his campaign. Trump narrowly carried the state over Hillary Clinton in 2016 – by 10,704 votes – and four years later Biden defeated Trump by about 154,000 votes. Pro-Palestinian demonstrators gather in Warren, Michigan, on February 1, 2024, outside the venue where President Joe Biden was speaking. But, he said, the burden was on Biden and his campaign to spell out what he would do in a second term.
Persons: Charles Williams, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Biden, Trump, , Williams, , ” Williams, Jay, , Hillary Clinton, “ He’s, Adam Abusalah, Abusalah, ” Abusalah, Biden ”, Jeff Kowalsky, Karine Jean, Pierre, Kevin Munoz, Sens, Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, Gretchen Whitmer, ” Biden, wouldn’t, Emani Williams, “ ’ Sleepy Biden ’, they’ve, ” Dante Parker, ” Parker, “ We’ve, Norman Clement, We’re, ” Clement, Biden hasn’t, Clement, “ I’m, didn’t Organizations: Detroit CNN —, Biden can’t, Historic King Solomon Baptist Church, Biden, White, Trump, Arab, Muslim, , Palestinian, Getty, , CNN, Democratic, Michigan Gov, Renaissance High School, Detroit Change Locations: Detroit, Michigan, , Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, America’s Great, Dearborn, Israel, Warren, Macomb County, United States, Warren , Michigan, AFP, Gaza
Biden's meeting with UAW workers in the Detroit area will come just days after union President Shawn Fain announced the group's endorsement. said Abdullah Hammoud, the mayor of Dearborn, one of the largest Arab American communities in the nation. Biden is looking to build on that power as he seeks reelection and the state’s critical 15 electoral votes. Photos You Should See View All 45 ImagesHis visit to Michigan comes ahead of the state's Feb. 27 primary. The early endorsement by the UAW was a clear win for Biden, who came to Michigan to stand alongside striking autoworkers last year.
Persons: Joe Biden, Shawn Fain, Fain, — Joe Biden, , Abdullah Hammoud, Biden, Pennsylvania —, Donald Trump’s, Debbie Dingell, we've, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Hammoud, Chavez Rodriguez, Israel, Sherry Gay, , ” Biden, Worm, Sen, Jeremy Moss, Donald Trump, Joe Biden’s, ” ___ Long, Fatima Hussein Organizations: DETROIT, United Auto Workers, Michigan, UAW, Democratic, White House, Arab, Biden, Teamsters, Wednesday, Health Ministry, Israel, AP VoteCast, Trump, Republican Locations: Gaza, Detroit, Michigan, Israel, Dearborn, . Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, U.S, Washington, “ Michigan, Arab, Palestine, Tel Aviv, Grand Rapids, New, Grand Rapids , Michigan
The administration appears to be struggling with finding Arab American and Muslim leaders who are willing to even meet with White House officials, and no Muslim or Arab American groups have endorsed Biden’s reelection bid. And I think that’s a pretty good descriptor of Arab American voters right now.”The ceasefire calls are coming from a diversity of progressive groups, including those representing Jewish voters, voters of color and young people – key parts of Biden’s winning 2020 coalition. In the last presidential election cycle, Biden received the support of several prominent Muslim American elected officials and community leaders. At least 146,620 of the 200,000 Muslim American voters in Michigan cast a ballot in the 2020 election cycle, according to an analysis by Emgage. Some Arab American and Muslim voters say even if Biden’s campaign ramps up their outreach, it will be too late.
Persons: Washington CNN —, Rashida Tlaib, Joe Biden, Biden, , , Tlaib –, Biden’s, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Abdullah Hammoud, he’s, ” Hammoud, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins, Hammoud, it’s, Kamala Harris ’, Harris, Harris ’, ” “, Hanan Shaheen, Wadee Alfayoumi, Joe ”, Adrian Hemond, “ He’s, Hemond, Chavez Rodriguez’s, Assad Turfe, Wayne, he’d, Chavez Rodriguez, there’s, , we’ve, Osama Siblani, Siblani, Dilawar Syed –, , Usamah Andrabi, Khalid Turaani, Farah Khan, Trump, Hillary Clinton, Nabila Taha, ” Taha, ” Michael Tyler, Ariana Afshar, Hassan Abdel Salam, Dawud Walid, Samraa Luqman, ” CNN’s Kaanita Iyer Organizations: Washington CNN, Michigan Democratic, Palestinian, firebrand, Muslim, CNN, Democratic, White, Dearborn, , Intergovernmental Affairs, American, American voters, Jewish, Arab American, Lebanese American, US Small Business Administration, Democratic Party, Republicans, Justice Democrats, Muslim American, Biden, Michigan, Trump ., University of Minnesota, Islamic, Trump Locations: Michigan, Palestinian American, Israel, Gaza, Tlaib, Detroit, Arab, , Palestinian, America, Illinois, Chavez Rodriguez’s Michigan, Gaza’s, Dearborn, Lebanese, Northville , Michigan, Minnesota, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Washington ,, California
Local restrictions in Michigan derailed more than two dozen utility-scale renewable energy projects as of last May, according to a study by the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University. Nationwide, and at least 228 restrictions in 35 states have been imposed to stop green energy projects. The shift has sparked a political backlash that may escalate as more states seek to simplify getting green energy projects approved and built. But many local officials say giving states the power to site large-scale energy projects clashes with cherished U.S. political principles. In Kansas, Osage County’s moratorium on commercial solar and wind projects came in 2022 after multiple hearings.
Persons: Clara Ostrander, Ostrander, , Dan Scripps, Gretchen Whitmer, Biden, Jay Bailey, can’t, Elise Caplan, Scripps, suburbanites, Josh Svaty, Svaty, ” ___ Hanna Organizations: Leasing, Sabin, Climate, Columbia University . Nationwide, Public Service Commission, Scripps, Michigan, Democratic Gov, . Michigan, Republican, American Council, Renewable Energy, Columbia University, Local, Kansas Statehouse Locations: LANSING, Mich, Montcalm County, Monroe County, Michigan, Connecticut, New York , Oregon, Minnesota, Rhode Island, In Kansas, Osage, Flint Hills, Kansas, Monroe, ” Michigan, Illinois, California , Connecticut , New York, Maryland , Massachusetts, Minnesota , New Jersey, New Mexico, Florida, South Dakota, , Topeka , Kansas
The scaled back package of bills known as the Reproductive Health Act will repeal regulations aimed at abortion providers, known as TRAP laws, that critics had said were designed to close abortion providers. Last November, Michigan voters overwhelmingly approved a citizen-led ballot proposal — known as Prop 3 — that enshrined abortion rights in their state’s constitution. Whitsett, a Detroit Democrat, opposed the repeal of a state law that requires patients to wait 24 hours before receiving an abortion. A group of some of the state's top abortion right advocates slammed Whitsett in a statement after the package's passage. The organization has called restrictions on Medicaid coverage for abortion “de facto abortion bans” for people with low incomes.
Persons: Gretchen Whitmer, Laurie Pohutsky, ” Pohutsky, Roe, Wade, Karen Whitsett, Whitsett, member’s, , Whitmer Organizations: — Michigan Democrats, Gov, Reproductive, Michigan, Detroit, Democratic, Detroit Democrat, Whitsett, Democrats, Associated Press Locations: LANSING, Mich, Michigan, Detroit
Donald Trump filed a lawsuit Tuesday trying to fight off attempts to get him off the ballot in Michigan. His lawyers argued that pulling him off the ballot would violate the will of the people. Trump is currently fending off attempts to pull his name off the ballot in other states including Colorado and Minnesota. A liberal group filed a suit in Michigan state court arguing that Trump should be disqualified from the ballot. "Even if the events of January 6, 2021, could constitute an 'insurrection' (they do not), President Trump did not 'engage' in it," Trump's lawyers argued.
Persons: Donald Trump, , Trump, Trump's, Benson Organizations: Service, Michigan, State, Trump Locations: Michigan, Colorado, Minnesota
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Former President Donald Trump is asking a court to prevent Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson from leaving his name off the 2024 primary ballot. Political Cartoons View All 1227 ImagesA lawsuit in Colorado also is focusing on the Constitution's “insurrection” clause to bar Trump from that state's 2024 ballot. Even if the events of January 6, 2021, could constitute an ‘insurrection’ (they do not), President Trump did not ‘engage’ in it. “Despite President Trump’s tremendous popularity, there are people who want to deny Michigan voters the opportunity to express their choice by voting for him,” according to Trump's Michigan filing. “To accomplish this, they want the secretary of state to violate her duties and exercise powers she does not have to keep President Trump’s name off of the ballot.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jocelyn Benson, Benson, Trump, Joe Biden’s, , ” Trump, , Trump’s Organizations: Michigan, U.S, Detroit Free Press, U.S . Capitol, Trump, Republican, Colorado, Minnesota Supreme Locations: LANSING, Mich, Michigan, Constitution's, Colorado, Minnesota, United States
While the trial played out in Colorado, Trump filed a lawsuit to shut down a similar case in Michigan. The 14th Amendment says US officials who take an oath to uphold the Constitution are disqualified from office if they “engaged in insurrection” or aided the country’s enemies. Then, fighting would be understood as requiring violent action.”The relationship between Trump and far-right extremists is “unprecedented,” Simi said. 14th Amendment scholar to testify nextThe anti-Trump challengers said they’ll feature additional expert testimony from one of the preeminent scholars on the history of the 14th Amendment, Gerard Magliocca. “Despite President Trump’s tremendous popularity, there are people who want to deny Michigan voters the opportunity to express their choice by voting for him,” Trump’s lawyers wrote.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, , Peter Simi, ” Simi, Simi, Eric Olson, ’ Trump, Scott Gessler, Joe Biden, Biden, Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg, Jamie Raskin, Gerard Magliocca, Marjorie Taylor Greene, isn’t, Troy Nehls, , ” Trump, Jocelyn Benson, Benson doesn’t, Trump’s, , CNN’s Devan Cole, Avery Lotz Organizations: CNN, Trump, Chapman University, Colorado, Capitol, Simi, Transportation, GOP Rep, Trump isn’t, Texas Rep, Michigan, ” CNN, People Locations: Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia
President Joe Biden is expected to visit a picket line Tuesday in the Great Lake State following a public invitation Friday from UAW President Shawn Fain. UAW members Niko Shinn (front) and Darius Collier (back) walk a picket line on Sept. 25, 2023 outside a Mopar facility owned by automaker Stellantis in Centerline. Fain has appeared with the independent senator from Vermont in Washington, D.C., and during a recent UAW rally in Detroit. Trump led Biden 46% to 43% among union members in an August survey, after Biden led Trump 51 % to 42% in June, according to Bernie Porn, president of EPIC·MRA. "With union members, he has been so supportive of just about everything that union members want.
Persons: Rebecca Cook, Joe Biden, Shawn Fain, Donald Trump, Leah Millis, Trump, Darius Collier, Collier, Stellantis, They've, Biden, Fain, Mark Burton, Gretchen Whitmer, Niko Shinn, Michael Wayland, Whitmer, Debbie Dingell, Sen, Bernie Sanders, Sanders, Fain's, who's, Bernie Porn, Trump's, Jamie Roe, Scott Olson Organizations: GM, United Auto Workers, Louisville Kentucky, Reuters DETROIT, General Motors, Ford Motor, Air Force, Joint Base Andrews, Reuters Biden, Biden, Trump, White, UAW, Michigan Gov, Democrat, Stellantis, CNBC Michigan, U.S . Rep, Washington , D.C, Detroit automakers, GOP, Trump's, Drake Enterprises, Republican, Plant, Getty Locations: Louisville, Detroit , Michigan, Michigan, Great Lake State, Clinton Township , Michigan, U.S, Joint Base Andrews , Maryland, . Michigan, Vermont, Washington ,, Detroit, Macomb County , Michigan, United States, Ford's Wayne, Wayne , Michigan
Biden leads Trump and DeSantis in swing state Michigan by 3 and 6 points respectively. Trump won the state in 2016 and Biden flipped it back in 2020. Ron DeSantis in Michigan, the Midwest battleground state key to his reelection chances next year. (In the 2020 presidential race, 97% of Michigan Democrats backed Biden and 94% of Republicans supported Trump, according to CNN exit polling.) "No one wants to strike," Biden said during his remarks at the White House.
Persons: Biden, Trump, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Hillary Clinton, Gretchen Whitmer, Dana Nessel, Jocelyn Benson, Sen, Debbie Stabenow, , Stellantis, Julie Su, Gene Sperling Organizations: UAW, Service, Florida Gov, Susquehanna Polling, Research, Trump, Michigan Democrats, Republicans, CNN, Kent County, Michigan, Democratic, United Auto Workers, — Ford, General Motors, Ford, White Locations: Michigan, Wall, Silicon, DeSantis, Wolverine, Detroit, Kent, Grand Rapids, Lansing, Wayne , Michigan, Wentzville , Missouri, Toledo , Ohio
The July indictment accused Mr. Trump, Mr. De Oliveira and Mr. Nauta of trying to delete Mar-a-Lago security footage. The government had requested a trial date in December, while Mr. Trump’s lawyers asked for an indefinite postponement. Once he was sworn in as president, Mr. Trump reimbursed Mr. Cohen. Rather than publish her account, the tabloid suppressed it in cooperation with Mr. Trump and Mr. Cohen, prosecutors say. Ms. Maddock, who has close ties to Mr. Trump and is married to Matt Maddock, a state representative, accused Ms. Nessel of “a personal vendetta.”“This is part of a national coordinated” effort to stop Mr. Trump, she added.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Trump’s, Jack Smith, Fani, Willis, Mr, Alvin L, Bragg, Rudolph W, Giuliani, Mark Meadows, , , ” Mr, Brad Raffensperger, Joseph R, Biden, Emily Kohrs, “ You’re, , Ms, Smith’s, Smith, Prosecutors, Mike Pence, Walt Nauta, Carlos De Oliveira, De Oliveira, Nauta, , Stormy Daniels, Michael D, Cohen, Daniels, Karen McDougal, McDougal, Bragg’s, Juan M, Merchan, “ Trump, Merchan’s, Cyrus R, Vance Jr, Daniels’s, Hope Hicks, Kellyanne Conway, Allen H, Weisselberg, Mimi E, Rocah, Letitia James, James, Donald Jr, Eric, Ivanka Trump, Michigan’s “, Dana Nessel, Meshawn Maddock, Maddock, Matt Maddock, Nessel, Wright Blake, Mayra Rodriguez, Kris Mayes, Richie Taylor, Maggie Haberman, Glenn Thrush, Jonah E, Rebecca Davis O’Brien, Michael Gold, Michael Rothfeld, Ed Shanahan, Richard Fausset, Ashley Wong Organizations: Mr, Democrat, New, New York City, White House, Department, Georgia Republican Party, Trump, The New York Times, Capitol, Federal, Court, Congress, Justice Department, Mar, Manhattan, National Enquirer, Trump Tower, U.S, National, Trump Organization, Trump National Golf Club Westchester, New York, Civil, Michigan, Michigan Republican Party Locations: Manhattan, Georgia, Fulton County, Lago, New York, United States, Washington, Palm Beach, Fla, Mar, Lower Manhattan, Westchester County, Michigan, Arizona, Bromwich
For just as long, critics of affirmative action have questioned whether race-conscious admissions policies are fair or warranted. The Supreme Court weighed in on Thursday, striking down affirmative action policies at Harvard and the University of North Carolina. In 2014, he founded Students for Fair Admissions, the group behind several major Supreme Court challenges to affirmative action - including the cases that led to Thursday's decision. Connerly persuaded his fellow regents to ban affirmative action. He concluded that affirmative action as part of an approach that aimed to remedy historic disadvantages and did not favor unqualified applicants over qualified ones could still be used.
Persons: EDWARD BLUM Edward Blum, Blum, LEE BOLLINGER, Lee Bollinger, Society's, Bollinger, WARD CONNERLY, Jim Crow, Pete Wilson, Connerly, CHRISTOPHER EDLEY, Bill Clinton, Christopher Edley Jr, Clinton, Edley, Joseph Ax, Gabriella Borter, Sharon Bernstein, Donna Bryson, Leslie Adler Organizations: Harvard, University of North, Fair, University of Michigan, U.S, Bollinger, Columbia University, Universities, Republican, Regents, University of California, UC, American, JR, UC Berkeley's, Thomson Locations: University of North Carolina, U.S ., Grutter, Michigan, California, Louisiana, Sacramento
For just as long, critics of affirmative action have questioned whether race-conscious admissions policies are fair or warranted. The Supreme Court weighed in on Thursday, striking down affirmative action policies at Harvard and the University of North Carolina. In 2014, he founded Students for Fair Admissions, the group behind several major Supreme Court challenges to affirmative action - including the cases that led to Thursday's decision. Connerly persuaded his fellow regents to ban affirmative action. He concluded that affirmative action as part of an approach that aimed to remedy historic disadvantages and did not favor unqualified applicants over qualified ones could still be used.
Persons: EDWARD BLUM Edward Blum, Blum, LEE BOLLINGER, Lee Bollinger, Society's, Bollinger, WARD CONNERLY, Jim Crow, Pete Wilson, Connerly, CHRISTOPHER EDLEY, Bill Clinton, Christopher Edley Jr, Clinton, Edley, Joseph Ax, Gabriella Borter, Sharon Bernstein, Donna Bryson, Leslie Adler Organizations: Harvard, University of North, Fair, University of Michigan, U.S, Bollinger, Columbia University, Universities, Republican, Regents, University of California, UC, American, JR, UC Berkeley's, Thomson Locations: University of North Carolina, U.S ., Grutter, Michigan, California, Louisiana, Sacramento
[1/2] Women's March activists hold signs outside the White House in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade abortion decision in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 9, 2022. With that goal now accomplished after the U.S. Supreme Court threw out Roe's precedent and gutted federal abortion rights last June, the leaders of March For Life hope to galvanize support for state and federal legislation placing further limits on abortion. Michigan voters approved a state constitutional amendment last November to enshrine abortion rights. This year's national march will take place two days before Jan. 22, which would have been the 50th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision. Abortion rights advocates were marking the occasion by reflecting on the enormous disruption in reproductive healthcare that the United States has witnessed over the last year, and calling for more legislation to protect abortion rights at the state and national level.
March for Life returns to DC with new post-Roe v. Wade focus
  + stars: | 2023-01-20 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
Anti-abortion activists hold a banner as they walk in front of the U.S. Supreme Court building during the annual "March for Life", in Washington, January 21, 2022. One year ago, the annual March for Life protest against legal abortion took place in Washington amid a mood of undisguised triumph. With a fresh conservative majority on the Supreme Court, thousands of marchers braved bitterly cold weather to celebrate the seemingly inevitable fall of Roe v. Wade. Now, with the constitutional right to abortion no longer the rule of the land, the March for Life returns Friday with a new focus. Instead of concentrating their attention on the Supreme Court, the marchers plan to target the building directly across the street: the U.S. Capitol.
Social media users are falsely claiming that images of individuals transporting ballots to an election site in Detroit after 8 pm on Election Day prove that there was election fraud in Detroit. This video is from the Detroit Department of Elections at 2978 West Grand.” (here). A spokesperson from the Michigan Department of State, Jake Rollow, added in a statement via email that ballots must go through a security screening before they’re counted. There is no evidence that photographs presented in an article are proof of fraud or unusual processes taking place on election day in Detroit, Michigan. Election officials told Reuters ballots must be collected, verified, and counted, a process that can take hours past poll closing time at 8pm.
Michigan voters passed a constitutional amendment known as Proposal 3 that enshrines the right to an abortion by nearly 55%, according to Edison Research. The victories for abortion rights suggested that voters of all political stripes are balking at the severe abortion restrictions that several Republican-led states have enforced since the U.S. Supreme Court gutted federal abortion rights in June. The outcomes of the ballot questions, particularly in a swing state like Michigan, could set the stage for future state campaigns to proactively reinstate abortion rights. The mood was jovial as the "yes" votes on the Michigan amendment outpaced "no" votes across the state. Michigan Reproductive Freedom For All, a coalition of reproductive rights and progressive groups, led the petition to get the amendment on the ballot.
They wanted to protect abortion rights and stop candidates beholden to Republican former president Donald Trump. That surprised Democratic Party strategists and pollsters, who had expected inflation would trump everything, including concerns about the loss of abortion rights. Michigan voters approved a ballot issue that gave abortion state constitutional protection and re-elected Governor Gretchen Whitmer, who had vowed to “fight like hell” to protect abortion rights. Sydney Wright, an 18-year-old student at the University of Nevada, Reno, said she counts herself as a conservative but voted Democratic because of abortion. THE TRUMP FACTORLike Wright, Nyasha Riley, 37, a registered Republican in Phoenix, voted for Democrats because of abortion rights and Trump.
They wanted to protect abortion rights and stop candidates beholden to Republican former president Donald Trump. That surprised Democratic Party strategists and pollsters, who had expected inflation would trump everything, including concerns about the loss of abortion rights. Michigan voters approved a ballot issue that gave abortion state constitutional protection and re-elected Governor Gretchen Whitmer, who had vowed to “fight like hell” to protect abortion rights. Sydney Wright, an 18-year-old student at the University of Nevada, Reno, said she counts herself as a conservative but voted Democratic because of abortion. THE TRUMP FACTORLike Wright, Nyasha Riley, 37, a registered Republican in Phoenix, voted for Democrats because of abortion rights and Trump.
Michigan's Proposal 3 would make pregnancy decisions a state constitutional right. Proponents say that the measure will protect abortion access and medical staff who perform abortions. Currently, Michigan's restrictions on abortion access include parental consent for minors and waiting periods for abortions, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Supporters say the constitutional amendment is necessary to affirm the right to abortion and nullify a 1931 state law that completely bans abortions and threatens abortion providers with up to 15 years of imprisonment. They oppose the proposal because it would cancel out laws on the books that restrict abortions, including parental consent laws.
Michigan Republicans Show How to Lose on Abortion
  + stars: | 2022-10-29 | by ( Nicholas Tomaino | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Michigan voters may be about to approve an abortion law that would be among the most permissive in the country. If they do, the reason will be a combination of proponents’ dishonesty and opponents’ negligence. The end of Roe v. Wade has yet to change anything in the Wolverine State. A 1931 law, still on the books but unenforceable under Roe, prohibited abortion except to save the life of the mother. Two courts granted their petitions for an injunction against enforcing the law, and a state judge struck down the law in September.
Both the Republican State Legislative Committee (RSLC) and the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee (DLCC), which support legislative candidates, reported a record pace of fundraising in the first half of the year. A Democratic-aligned group, the States Project, said it would spend a massive $60 million on state legislative races this cycle. Democratic candidates have sought to ensure voters understand the connection between legislative races and abortion access after decades of federal protection. The state Supreme Court this year ruled the state constitution does not protect abortion rights, reversing its own ruling from four years earlier after several new appointees joined the court. She reeled off a list of steps the Democratic majority has taken to expand abortion rights.
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