Fallout from Arizona abortion ruling just beginning  

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Fallout from Arizona abortion ruling just beginning  

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The Big Story 

Fallout from Arizona abortion ruling just beginning  

An Arizona Supreme Court decision imposing a near-total abortion ban shows there’s no safe position for Republicans to take on abortion.   

© Caitlin O’Hara/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The politics on abortion have shifted, and after getting exactly what they wanted two years ago when Roe v. Wade was overturned, Republicans are still on defense and struggling to find a winning message.  

 

One day after former President Donald Trump tried to dodge the issue and neutralize Democratic attacks by saying abortion will be decided by states, the resurrection of an 1864 law that will ban almost all abortions showed the position can boomerang politically on Republicans.  

 

“I don’t think there’s a single Republican candidate in Arizona that was prepared for the fallout of this particular decision,” said Stan Barnes, a Republican consultant who previously served in Arizona’s state Senate. 

 

Trump is trying to thread the needle on abortion by insisting states will make their own decisions. But on Wednesday he said Arizona’s ruling went too far and would “definitely” change. 

 

“Yeah, they did,” Trump said when asked if Arizona went too far. “And that will be straightened out. And as you know, it’s all about states’ rights. That will be straightened out. And I’m sure that the governor and everybody else are going to bring it back into reason, and that will be taken care of, I think, very quickly.” 

 

The Civil War-era law makes abortion a felony punishable by two to five years in prison for anyone who performs or helps a woman obtain one. It includes an extremely narrow exception for “when it is necessary” to save a pregnant person’s life.   

 

President Biden and Democrats are trying to seize what they see as a major political advantage

 

At a press conference with the Japanese prime minister Wednesday, Biden was asked what he would say to the people of Arizona in the aftermath of the ruling. 

 

“Elect me. I’m in the 20th century — 21st century. Not back then,” the president said. “They weren’t even a state.” 

 

Biden and his campaign have made abortion access a central pillar of his reelection effort, warning that Trump and Republican leaders pose a grave threat to reproductive health care after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022. 

 

Essential Reads 

How policy will be impacting the health care sector this week and beyond:

The hosts of ABC’s “The View” slammed a recent ruling on abortion law by the Arizona Supreme Court on their Wednesday show. “What’s the next thing?” co-host Whoopi Goldberg asked in reaction to the Tuesday ruling by the Grand Canyon State’s highest court. “‘Cause you know, on this, with all of this comes birth control. With all of this comes everything that you need as a woman to have … have had put in place, to make sure that …

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s running mate, Nicole Shanahan, shared her views on abortion in a lengthy post online after the Arizona Supreme Court abortion law made national news Tuesday.

Costs for home healthcare for the elderly and bed-ridden have gone up by 14.2 percent over the past year, according to new Consumer Price Index data released Wednesday.  

In Other News 

Branch out with a different read:

Arizona’s abortion ban is likely to cause a scramble for services in states where it’s still legal

Adrienne Mansanares expects a flurry of calls from patients in Arizona starting this week. She’s the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, which has clinics that provide abortions in Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada. Mansanares said the clinics should be able to accommodate people who are seeking the procedure …

Around the Nation 

Local and state headlines on health care:

Wyoming Supreme Court declines to take up state abortion case (Wyoming Public Radio
Speaker, lieutenant governor agree to hold Medicaid expansion negotiations in public (Mississippi Today
How Ohio’s GOP governor sells public health: Don’t call it that. (The Washington Post

What We’re Reading 

Health news we’ve flagged from other outlets:

BIO’s top lobbyist exits, signaling reorganization (Stat
Congress likely to kick the can on Covid-era telehealth policies (KFF Health News
About one-third of socially vulnerable women missing recommended mammograms: CDC (ABC News

What Others are Reading 

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Hamas has told negotiators it does not have 40 Israeli hostages that it can release as part of a temporary cease-fire deal with Israel, a source familiar … Read more

The popular kids snack Lunchables contains relatively high levels of lead and sodium, a consumer watchdog group warned Tuesday. Consumer Reports (CR), … Read more

You’re all caught up. See you tomorrow!