Most Abortion Bans Include Exceptions. In Practice, Few Are Granted.
Rape victims and patients with complicated pregnancies are confronting the limits of state abortion laws.
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Rape victims and patients with complicated pregnancies are confronting the limits of state abortion laws.
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The March for Life, held each year for a half-century, should be a celebration now that Roe v. Wade has fallen. Instead, anti-abortion activists are split over what comes next.
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The judge said he would decide soon whether to issue a preliminary injunction ordering the F.D.A. to withdraw its approval of the drug or wait for the full trial.
By Pam Belluck and
The 96-year-old scientist who came up with an idea for an “unpregnancy pill” decades ago has led an eventful life, from his teenage days in the French Resistance to his friendships with famous artists.
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Tracking Abortion Bans Across the Country
The New York Times is tracking the status of abortion laws in each state following the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
By Allison McCann and
The Unexpected Ways the Left is Winning in the Abortion Fight
Six months after the end of Roe v. Wade, efforts to defend abortion access are racking up victories in state legislatures and in the courts.
By Sabrina TaverniseSydney HarperNina FeldmanStella TanMarc GeorgesLiz O. BaylenMarion LozanoElisheba Ittoop and
Legal Abortions Fell Around 6 Percent in Two Months After End of Roe
New data shows that the number of abortions fell by more than 10,000.
By Margot Sanger-Katz and
Graham Proposes 15-Week Abortion Ban, Splitting Republicans
The South Carolina senator’s bill was an effort to find a politically palatable position for his party before the midterm elections, in which abortion rights are expected to be a potent issue.
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The Long Path to Reclaim Abortion Rights
The Supreme Court decision to reverse Roe, far from settling the matter, instead has launched court and political battles across the states likely to go on for years.
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Roe’s Death Will Change American Democracy
The anti-abortion movement has won its decades-long effort to undo Roe. Now what?
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America Is Not Ready for the End of Roe v. Wade
Americans are about to lose a constitutional right. It’s worth fighting for.
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I Prayed and Protested to End Roe. What Comes Next?
What the overturning of Roe v. Wade means to abortion opponents like me.
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Abortion Pills Will Change a Post-Roe World
Medication abortion isn’t a magic solution to the likely end of Roe. But it can blunt the fallout.
By Greer DonleyRachel Rebouché and
The Women Who Had Abortions Before Roe v. Wade
We must understand what happened before Roe v. Wade to prepare for an America in which Roe is gone.
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JD Vance’s 2021 insult of “childless cat ladies” has sparked bipartisan outrage at a moment when women’s choices are seen as a galvanizing political force.
By Katie Rogers
After President Biden’s rocky answer on abortion at the debate, his campaign has ramped up its messaging on Donald Trump’s role in overturning Roe v. Wade and his policy stances.
By Simon J. Levien
Two years after Roe was struck down, the conversation has focused on the complications that can come with pregnancy and fertility, helping to drive more support for abortion rights.
By Kate Zernike
The movement looks for a path forward: “Is the goal the absolute abolition of abortion in our nation?”
By Elizabeth Dias
Supporters of abortion rights hailed the ruling on a challenge they said was fueled by junk science, but warned that it only maintained the status quo as more challenges loomed.
By Kate Zernike
Out-of-state trips for abortions more than doubled in 2023, demonstrating the upheaval in access since the overturn of Roe v. Wade.
By Molly Cook Escobar, Amy Schoenfeld Walker, Allison McCann, Scott Reinhard and Helmuth Rosales
In “The Fall of Roe,” Elizabeth Dias and Lisa Lerer explain exactly how Roe v. Wade was made — and unmade.
By Mattie Kahn
A conservative Christian coalition’s plan to end the federal right to abortion began just days after Trump’s 2016 election.
By Elizabeth Dias and Lisa Lerer
In an interview for a forthcoming book, Mrs. Clinton also suggested that if Donald Trump won in November “we may never have another actual election.”
By Lisa Lerer and Elizabeth Dias
The party is pursuing a “sword and shield” political strategy as Senator Chuck Schumer pushes showdown votes on border security and abortion rights ahead of this year’s elections.
By Carl Hulse
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