Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Chasing Votes, Some In House GOP Highlight Their 'Pro-Choice' Messaging
A small group of House Republicans will spend the run-up to Election Day pushing an unexpected message: support for abortion rights. With control of the House on the line, Republican lawmakers running in districts that Joe Biden won in the 2020 presidential race have moderated their message on abortion including, in some cases, using the term pro-choice. (Alfaro, 10/3)
Former President Trump said in an interview that he told Melania Trump that shes got to write what you believe regarding her apparent pro-choice stance on abortion in her memoir thats set to release next week. We spoke about it. And I said, you have to write what you believe. Im not going to tell what you to do. You have to write what you believe, Trump told Fox News Channels Bill Melugin in an interview that aired Thursday. (Ventura, 10/3)
Abortion-rights ballot measure supporters across the country have raised nearly eight times as much as groups campaigning against the amendments on the November ballots. But that advantage may not translate into a huge benefit down the stretch in Florida, the most expensive of the nine statewide campaigns to enshrine abortion rights into state constitutions. (Mulvihill, 10/4)
Also
In a year in which support for abortion rights could determine control of statehouses, Congress, and the presidency, Prop 1 seemed like a shoo-in, especially in the blue state of New York. Yet with a little over a month before the election, the effort to pass the New York ERA has been stumbling. An opposition campaign, calling itself the Coalition to Protect Kids, has fixated on the amendments protections for trans people, exaggerating its impact on womens sports and pushing misleading claims about its effects on parental rights. (Pauly, 10/4)