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As the first full year since Roe v. Wade was overturned closes, the abortion landscape in the U.S. has changed legally, politically and medically.
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For the first time in 22-years women are running the top organization responsible for electing Latino Democrats to Congress. They say they know how to win with abortiona as a driving force.
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Legal and reproductive rights experts are concerned over a lack of clarity for emergency abortions after the ruling in Cox v. Texas.
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NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Dr. Andrea Palmer, a Fort Worth OB-GYN, about the "medical emergency" exception in Texas' abortion ban.
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The case involves just one abortion, but it's likely to have wider implications in the state with some of the strictest abortion laws in the country.
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A Texas federal judge revoked FDA approval of the self-managed abortion drug in April.
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A decision on whether the Texas Supreme Court will uphold a district judge's decision allowing Kate Cox to receive an abortion is currently pending.
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Travis County District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble granted a temporary restraining order that will allow Kate Cox, a pregnant woman in Dallas-Fort Worth, the right to an emergency abortion.
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Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., says he is dropping his hold on hundreds of military promotions.
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The Texas Supreme Court held a hearing on the state's medical exception to its abortion bans. Plaintiffs including women and doctors say the law is endangering lives in complicated wanted pregnancies.