Daily Press

VIRGINIA’S BATTLE OVER BIRTH CONTROL

Democrats pass bill protecting contracept­ion. Many in GOP opposed it.

- By Katie King

RICHMOND — A bill that would protect the right to access birth control is poised to head to Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s desk — despite pushback from Republican legislator­s.

Health care providers in Virginia currently can prescribe birth control, and some methods, such as condoms and the emergency contracept­ive pill, are available over the counter. But bill sponsor Del. Cia Price said she introduced the measure due to growing concerns that restrictio­ns could be on the horizon following the Roe v. Wade was overturned.

The bill states individual­s have the “right to obtain contracept­ives and to engage in contracept­ion” and that health care providers “shall have the right to provide contracept­ives and contracept­ion-related informatio­n.” It creates a right to file a lawsuit over violations.

The bill defines contracept­ives as any drug or device intended for use in the “prevention of pregnancy” that is legally marketed under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. It includes barrier methods — such as condoms and intrauteri­ne devices — and hormonal medication­s, such as birth control pills, injections, emergency contracept­ion, and transderma­l patches.

A few Republican­s joined the Democrat-held legislatur­e in passing the bill through the House by a 55-44 vote. But in the Senate, it passed by a party-line vote of 21-19.

“This is not an abortion bill,” Price, a Newport News Democrat, said in an interview. “To vote against the right to access condoms and birth control, that should really perk up some eyes and ears. What is the direction of our nation? Where are we headed?”

Republican opposition

Almost all Republican legislator­s from Hampton Roads voted against the bill, including Sens. Danny Diggs of Yorktown, Emily Jordan of Smithfield, Bill DeSteph of Virginia Beach and Christie New Craig of Chesapeake; and Dels. A.C. Cordoza of Hampton, Baxter Ennis and Jay Leftwich of Chesapeake, and Virginia Beach’s Anne Ferrell Tata and Barry Knight.

Del. Robert Bloxom of Mappsville was one of only a handful of

Republican­s to support the bill.

When asked about his vote, Diggs said he was told the legislatio­n would protect medication­s that cause lateterm abortions. He then acknowledg­ed he might have misunderst­ood the bill.

When asked about her vote, Jordan declined to comment.

“Ask caucus,” she said. A spokespers­on for the House Republican Caucus said it had no comment. The Senate Republican Caucus did not respond to a request for comment.

DeSteph told the Pilot he supported birth control access but objected to the provision in the bill that allowed for lawsuits.

The governor declined to share his thoughts. When asked for comment, a Youngkin spokespers­on said he reviews all legislatio­n that reaches his desk.

Supreme Court impact

Price said she became concerned for the future of birth control access after Roe was overturned in 2022. In his concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the court should reconsider other landmark cases, including Griswold vs. Connecticu­t.

In the 1965 Griswold ruling, the court ruled that the constituti­onal right to privacy protected the right of married couples to use contracept­ion. The court later extended that right to unmarried individual­s in its ruling on Eisenstadt v. Baird in 1972.

Alex Keena, assistant professor of political science at Virginia Commonweal­th University, said it’s not implausibl­e that birth control protection­s could fall.

“Is it farfetched? I don’t necessaril­y think so,” he said. “It would have been unthinkabl­e to overturn Roe just 10 years ago and look where we are today.”

Thirteen states have legal or constituti­onal protection­s for the right to contracept­ion, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Voters in three of those states, California, Michigan, and Vermont, passed constituti­onal amendments through ballot measures after Roe was overturned.

Lawmakers in Minnesota, New Mexico and Washington, D.C. enacted laws protecting contracept­ion access since the Supreme Court decision.

Issues pertaining to women’s health — including abortion, birth control, in vitro fertilizat­ion (IVF) and miscarriag­e care — have come to the forefront since Roe fell, nationally and at the state level.

Keena said it’s created a headache for Republican­s, who have struggled to define their exact stance on more nuanced aspects of reproducti­ve health.

“It opened up a whole new set of questions and problems that Republican­s weren’t really prepared to tackle,” he said. “They are all over the map and they are really struggling to find where they stand on these types of issues.”

But Price said polls show birth control has widespread support from the general public.

“People want access to contracept­ion,” she said.

A 2022 survey from the Kaiser Family Foundation found the majority of women (90%) ages 18-64 have used contracept­ives.

Questions about the bill

During a House health subcommitt­ee meeting, three groups with religious ties spoke against the measure.

Susan Muskett, president of Pro-Family Women, an organizati­on affiliated with the Catholic Church, said it would undermine religious rights and asserted it was broadly written and would protect access to abortion-inducing medication­s.

“A provider could determine that a woman has a health need for an elective chemical abortion weeks or months into a pregnancy and would be protected from any limitation­s impeding access to the chemical abortion drug,” said Muskett.

Todd Gathje, vice president of government relations at The Family Foundation, also shared concerns that abortifaci­ents would be “roped in” with the bill.

Price, a subcommitt­ee member, said the bill contained language specifical­ly stating it pertained to devices or medication­s that prevent — not end — a pregnancy.

“Words matter,” she said. “When someone comes up and says we aren’t sure what could be included, if you look at line 18 (in the bill), contracept­ion means an action taken to prevent pregnancy. This is not a conversati­on about abortion.”

Several organizati­ons, including the American College of Nurses-Midwives and the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts — the nation’s largest organizati­on for OBGYNs — spoke in favor of the legislatio­n. A representa­tive from ACOG said it would protect patients’ rights to family planning and to receive treatment for diseases that benefit from hormonal birth control.

Chandler Brooks, staff attorney with Virginia Division of Legislativ­e Services, told the subcommitt­ee the bill did not contain language forcing health care providers to prescribe birth control pills. VDLS provides nonpartisa­n legal research services to legislator­s and committees in the General Assembly.

“This establishe­s that there is a right to obtain and engage in contracept­ion, and that health care providers have the right to provide contracept­ives, but it doesn’t rise to the level of having requiremen­t language in the bill (for providers),” Brooks said.

While discussing the bill on the Senate floor, Roanoke Republican David Suetterlei­n said he supported birth control access but urged legislator­s to be cautious about making it a right.

“This creating an affirmativ­e legal right (to birth control) gives me some concern about where we go down that path,” said Suetterlei­n. “I think we need to be careful.”

On Wednesday, Sen. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, told the Pilot she didn’t understand why Republican­s were opposing the bill.

“If they are opposed to abortion, then why would they be opposed to protecting birth control, which would prevent a person from getting pregnant and needing an abortion in the first place?” she asked. The foundation is a nonpartisa­n organizati­on focused on polling and health policy research.

 ?? KENDALL WARNER/STAFF ?? The bill defines contracept­ives as any drug or device intended for use in the “prevention of pregnancy.”
KENDALL WARNER/STAFF The bill defines contracept­ives as any drug or device intended for use in the “prevention of pregnancy.”
 ?? Price ??
Price

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