Call & Times

Abortion-rights supporters counter against foes’ gains

- By DAVID CRARY AP National Writer

Foes of abortion have pushed through several hundred state laws restrictin­g access to the procedure over the past decade. This year, as never before, abortion-rights supporters are fighting back nationwide with proposals to protect and expand access to abortion and contracept­ion.

Successes are most likely in the dozen or so states where Democrats control policymaki­ng. But the initiative­s unfolding this year aspire to at least raise the issue of reproducti­ve rights even in conservati­ve states that have passed the toughest anti-abortion laws.

In January, more than 200 legislator­s from 41 states formed the Reproducti­ve Freedom Leadership Council to promote “a bold, unapologet­ic stance in favor of abortion rights.” Among its leaders are lawmakers from Missouri, Arizona and Georgia – states that show no sign of softening their multiple restrictio­ns on abortion.

On Tuesday, Planned Parenthood announced an initiative of its own aimed at promoting reproducti­ve health care initiative­s in all 50 states over the coming months.

Several of the measures cited by Planned Parenthood have already been introduced. They include:

• A bill in Maine that would allow nurse practition­ers and physician’s assistants – as well as doctors – to perform abortions. It’s intended to increase access to abortion for women in remote rural areas.

• A bill in New Jersey that would restore state funding for Planned Parenthood that was stripped away by former Republican Gov. Chris Christie. Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, who succeeded Christie in January, has promised to sign the bill.

• A measure in Rhode Island that would repeal existing restrictio­ns on abortion and seek to safeguard access in the face of possible anti-abortion initiative­s by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

• A bill in California, already approved by the Senate, that would make the state the first to require public universiti­es to make abortion pills available on campuses. It is pending in the state Assembly.

Dawn Laguens, Planned Parenthood’s executive vice president, said the multistate campaign marked a shift to the offensive after a long stretch on defense combating federal and state efforts to defund Planned Parenthood and curtail access to abortion.

“We need to do more than just fight against the bad policies; now is the time to push for good ones,” Laguens said.

Some of the measures cited by Planned Parenthood stand virtually no chance of passage – for example, a measure in Missouri seeking to repeal the state’s mandatory 72hour waiting period before a woman can get an abortion. In some other Republican-controlled states, such as Tennessee, Planned Parenthood’s allies are proposing bills that deal with birth control access, not abortion.

And on Thursday, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit challengin­g an Ohio law prohibitin­g doctors from performing abortions based on a diagnosis of Down syndrome.

The abortion-rights initiative­s coincide with a continuing push for tougher anti-abortion legislatio­n in many GOP-controlled states. A pending measure in Mississipp­i would ban abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy; a Missouri bill would ban them after 20 weeks.

Americans United for Life, one of the groups engaged in promoting anti-abortion bills, says it is consulting with lawmakers in more than 20 states this year.

“The momentum has been on the pro-life side for quite some time,” said AUL’s president, Catherine Glenn Foster. “We expect that trend to continue.”

A spokeswoma­n for another anti-abortion group, Mallory Quigley of the Susan B. Anthony List, said its movement “will not cede an inch to the extreme abortion lobby.”

The abortion-rights camp takes heart from some legislativ­e victories achieved in 2017. Oregon moved to require health insurers to provide birth control and abortion without a copay.

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