Tuesday’s presidential debate is the perfect high-stakes opportunity for moderators to press the GOP nominee on his inconsistent abortion record.
U.S. Sen. Rick Scott said Donald Trump would win Florida, while DeSantis blamed George Soros for the abortion amendment.
For abortion rights groups, the ballot strategy may be near its end. Only 17 states allow citizens to put amendments in front of voters. If the groups succeed in November, there will be only three states among those — Arkansas, North Dakota and Oklahoma — that ban abortion.
Florida voters who signed a petition to place a pro-choice abortion referendum on the ballot this November say they have been visited by police who are investigating claims of fraud at the behest of Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration, the Tampa Bay Times reported Saturday.
The national debate over abortion rights is playing out in the 17th Congressional District race between Lawler and Jones.
Both Kamala Harris and Tim Walz co-sponsored the Women’s Health Protection Act — a sweeping bill to codify abortion access.
The visits appear to be part of an unusual effort by the DeSantis administration to inspect thousands of already validated petitions for Amendment 4.
But abortion rights groups hope an appeals court will reverse the ruling before the Tuesday deadline to print the state ballots.
Missourians for Constitutional Freedom on Saturday morning filed an appeal to the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District.
There is little from the outside to indicate that Camelback Family Planning is Arizona’s busiest abortion clinic. It is just another office in another strip mall, with the occasional antiabortion protester outside.