Click in for more news from The Hill{beacon} Health Care Health Care   The Big Story Trump hedges on abortion banFormer President Trump said a national abortion ban is “off the table”
The Supreme Court’s rejection last week of the Biden administration’s appeal to weigh in on a dispute over emergency abortion care in Texas foreshadows how the next president could protect or restrict abortion access without signing — or vetoing — federal legislation.
In states like Arizona and Nevada, the initiatives have overwhelming support in the polls, while pro-abortion rights Democrats are in much closer races.
Question 1, the abortion rights question on this fall's ballot, does not actually include the word “abortion,” a fact opponents have seized on to say the measure is flawed. Backers accuse desperate opponents of "just making stuff up.
JD Vance said he and Donald Trump want to “win back people’s trust” on abortion. Those efforts clearly aren't going well so far.
Florida’s government is finding fault on multiple fronts with an abortion rights ballot measure that Governor Ron DeSantis opposes.
U.S. Senate candidates Mike Rogers and Elissa Slotkin meet Monday for their final debate in the tossup contest for Michigan's open U.S. Senate seat.
Ohio's close Senate race took a twist recently when cellphone video surfaced of Republican Bernie Moreno criticizing women whose votes are driven by the abortion issue.
But while voters are consistently backing abortion rights in referendums, they aren’t always choosing the Democrats who support them. Montana’s Democratic senator, Jon Tester, is falling behind anti-abortion Republican candidate Tim Sheehy in the polls. The Democratic candidate for governor is also badly lagging incumbent Republican Greg Gianforte.
The Palm Beach Post editorial board is backing Florida's proposed amendment to protect a woman's right to get an abortion.
Abortion questions are on the ballot directly in 10 states across the nation. Behind most campaigns seeking to secure abortion rights are everyday Americans who put in months — even years — of work to get these ballot measures before voters.