Candidates ranging from Donald Trump to House candidates are seeking to soften, or appear to soften, their hardline stances.
The Harris campaign is trying to transform women in battleground states into an organizing force who can drive their friends and family to the polls.
Abortion rights groups have outraised opponents by a nearly 8-to-1 margin in campaigns for ballot measures across the U.S. this year.
Battleground states’ ballot measures on abortion could benefit former President Donald Trump in the election, the Trump campaign’s political director told The Washington Post Friday, as polling suggests Republicans are willing to turn out to support abortion rights but still back Trump,
In overturning Roe v. Wade, the US Supreme Court didn’t so much settle America’s long-running fight over abortion as push the battle to states. The court’s June 2022 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization repealed constitutional and thus nationwide protections for abortions that had been in place since 1973.
Nebraskans will vote on a whopping six ballot measures this fall, including medical marijuana, abortion access, school choice and paid sick leave.
Donald Trump changed abortion rights, and Black women like Amber Thurman and Kaitlyn Joshua reflect the fight for reproductive justice.
With polls showing continued support for abortion rights, candidates are scrambling to either take advantage of opponents’ records or moderate their own positions.
Christian groups and abortion opponents rallied at the Ohio Statehouse Friday, a show of solidarity after losing a reproductive rights vote last year.
Here is where Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Trump stand on a federal ban, the Supreme Court and other issues related to abortion.
Former president revealed he’s ‘not going to tell’ his wife what to do after she announced her support of abortion rights