Policy Document Series · Issue 16 of 35 · Rights & Justice
Reproductive Rights
& Abortion
This Is Between a Woman and Her Doctor.

The United States is one of only four countries since 1994 to roll back abortion rights — alongside El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Poland. Over 60 countries liberalized in the same period. Canada has operated with zero abortion law for 36 years and has lower abortion rates, lower late-term rates, and lower maternal mortality than the US. The evidence is not ambiguous. The question is whether we follow it.

62.7M Women and girls living under state abortion bans as of 2026
92.8% Of abortions occur in the first trimester — no gestational limit means trusting doctors
18.6 US maternal deaths per 100K — worst of any wealthy nation (Norway: 0)
11 of 14 State ballot measures won for abortion rights since Dobbs — including Kansas (59%)
Contents
Section 01

Executive Summary

The government has no place in this decision. Religion has no place in this decision. The empirical record is clear: reproductive autonomy produces better outcomes on every measurable metric — lower abortion rates, lower maternal mortality, lower teen pregnancy, higher workforce participation, and lower poverty.

Countries That Rolled Back Abortion Rights Since 1994
4
El Salvador, Nicaragua, Poland — and the United States. The only wealthy democracy in this group.
Countries That Liberalized Abortion Rights Since 1994
60+
Ireland, France, Argentina, Colombia, Mexico, Norway, Denmark, Iceland — the global direction is unambiguous.

Ten pillars — one framework: Codify abortion in federal law with no government-imposed gestational limit. Repeal the Hyde Amendment. Make all contraception free. Protect medication abortion and codify FDA authority. Ban fetal personhood laws. Mandate federal IVF coverage at 3 cycles minimum. Require evidence-based sex education in all federally funded schools. Strengthen emergency maternal care through EMTALA enforcement. Close the Black maternal mortality gap. Permanently fund Title X at $500 million per year.

Voters have been clear: abortion rights have prevailed in 11 of 14 state ballot measures since Dobbs — including Kansas (59%), Ohio (57%), Missouri (51.6%), and Montana (57.8%). France constitutionalized abortion 780–72. Texas maternal mortality rose 56% in the first year of its ban. Abortion restrictions cost the economy $105–$133 billion per year in lost productivity. The political and moral case are the same: this is between a woman and her doctor.

Section 02

The Problem

The Post-Dobbs Landscape

As of early 2026, the United States has the most fragmented reproductive rights landscape of any democracy. Approximately 62.7 million women and girls live under state abortion bans. Roughly 1 in 3 women of childbearing age live in states that ban abortion before most women even know they are pregnant.

Restriction TypeStatesCount
Total banAL, AR, ID, IN, KY, LA, MS, ND, OK, SD, TN, TX, WV13
6-week ban (before most know they're pregnant)FL, GA, IA, SC, WY5
12-week banNE, NC2
15–18 week banUT (18 weeks)1
Viability or no government-imposed limitRemaining states~29

Source: Guttmacher Institute — guttmacher.org

Women Are Dying

These are not abstractions. They are named women, documented cases, confirmed preventable by the same state review committees operating under the laws that killed them.

Documented Preventable Deaths — State Review Committee Findings
Amber Nicole Thurman — Georgia, August 19, 2022
Doctors delayed a D&C for over 20 hours because of criminal penalties under Georgia's ban. She died of sepsis from retained pregnancy tissue that standard-of-care medicine would have removed.
Georgia Maternal Mortality Review Committee: Preventable
Candi Miller — Georgia, 2022
Died at home with her 3-year-old beside her. She was afraid to seek care under Georgia's ban. She had conditions that made her pregnancy high-risk; she knew she would be denied; she chose not to find out how.
Georgia Maternal Mortality Review Committee: Preventable
Nevaeh Crain — Texas, 2023, age 18
Died after physicians were required to wait for "confirmed fetal demise" before intervening — a legal standard imposed by Texas law, not a medical one. She deteriorated while they waited for paperwork to catch up with her body.
Documented by ProPublica investigative reporting
Porsha Ngumezi — Texas, 2023, mother of two
Died of hemorrhagic shock from a miscarriage after physicians did not perform a D&C. Texas law carries up to 99 years in prison for performing the procedure. She bled to death while clinically indicated care was withheld.
Documented by ProPublica investigative reporting

At least 12 preventable deaths have been documented nationwide — almost certainly an undercount, as maternal mortality review committees are underfunded, understaffed, and subject to political pressure in the states most affected.

Maternal Mortality: America's Shame

CountryMaternal Mortality (per 100K)Abortion Access
Norway0 (zero reported, 2022)Up to 18 weeks self-determined (expanded 2024)
Switzerland1.2Up to 12 weeks on request
Netherlands≤3Up to 24 weeks
Sweden~3Up to 18 weeks
Germany~4Up to 12 weeks
France~7Constitutionalized in 2024; up to 14 weeks
Canada~12No gestational limit — zero abortion law since 1988
United States18.6 (2023)13 states: total ban; 5 states: 6-week ban

Black women die in childbirth at 3.5 times the rate of white women — 50.3 vs. 14.5 per 100,000. The racial gap is widening: it was 2.6× in 2022. Over 80% of all US maternal deaths are preventable. Texas maternal mortality rose 56% in the first year of its ban; among white women in Texas it rose 95%. In states with protected abortion access, maternal mortality fell 21% over the same period.

The Doctor Exodus

OB/GYN residency applications to ban states dropped 6.7% in a single year. Texas fell 16%. Texas is projected to be 15% short of needed OB/GYNs by 2030, and over 40% of Texas counties are already classified as maternity care deserts. 60% of OB/GYNs in ban states fear legal retaliation; 40% say they actively limit emergency care to avoid prosecution. The bans are creating a self-reinforcing crisis: women die, doctors leave, more women die.

Sources: GEPI — thegepi.org · CDC — cdc.gov · NPR — npr.org

Section 03

How We Got Here

Roe, Casey, and the 50-Year Erosion

Roe v. Wade (1973) established the constitutional right to abortion. For 49 years, state legislatures systematically chipped away at it: mandatory waiting periods, parental consent requirements, TRAP laws targeting clinic construction, ultrasound mandates, counseling scripts containing medically inaccurate information, and funding prohibitions. Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992) replaced Roe's trimester framework with the "undue burden" standard, opening the door to restrictions previously impossible. By 2021, states had enacted over 1,300 abortion restrictions since Roe.

Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health (2022)

On June 24, 2022, the Supreme Court overturned Roe and Casey, holding there is no constitutional right to abortion. Thirteen states had trigger laws that took effect immediately or within 30 days. The decision placed the US alongside El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Poland as the only countries to roll back abortion rights since 1994. Every subsequent ballot measure has confirmed majority support for reproductive freedom in states that had restricted it.

The Hyde Amendment (1976–Present)

Since 1976, the Hyde Amendment has prohibited federal Medicaid funds from covering abortion — creating a two-tiered system where reproductive rights depend entirely on income. The fiscal inversion is stark: the government refuses to pay $568–$625 for an abortion while paying $9,131–$13,590 for a Medicaid birth. One in four Medicaid women seeking abortion are forced to carry because they cannot pay out of pocket. Hyde falls disproportionately on women of color — 62% of Black women below the poverty line are insured through Medicaid.

Medicaid Birth — Government Cost
$13,590
The outcome Hyde forces the government to fund when it refuses abortion coverage
Abortion — Cost Hyde Prohibits Covering
$625
Hyde is not fiscally conservative. It is ideologically punitive — and it costs more.

The Fetal Personhood Movement

In February 2024, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled frozen IVF embryos are "extrauterine children," immediately shutting down three IVF clinics. Nineteen states already have broad personhood provisions in law. In 2024, lawmakers in 16 states introduced over 40 fetal personhood bills. In 2025, 11 states introduced legislation to classify abortion as homicide. In the first two years after Dobbs, prosecutors initiated at least 412 criminal cases related to pregnancy, pregnancy loss, or birth outcomes. Personhood laws do not stop at abortion — they criminalize IUDs, Plan B, IVF, and every miscarriage that might look like something else to a prosecutor.

Sources: Center for Reproductive Rights — reproductiverights.org · Pregnancy Justice — pregnancyjusticeus.org · Guttmacher — guttmacher.org

Section 04

What Other Countries Do

Canada: 36 Years Without a Law

MetricCanadaUnited States
Abortion rate (per 1,000 women)~10.1~11.6
Abortions at or before 12 weeks~87%92.8%
Abortions at or after 21 weeks~1.3%1.1%
Maternal mortality (per 100K)~1218.6
Criminal abortion law in forceNone since 198813 states: total ban

Canada has one-third fewer abortions relative to population than the US. There was no surge in abortions after decriminalization. Late-term rates are essentially identical. The 36-year natural experiment is definitive: removing criminal law from abortion does not increase abortion rates or late-term procedures. It does reduce maternal mortality.

Recent Global Expansions

France constitutionalized abortion in March 2024, 780 votes to 72. Norway extended self-determined abortion from 12 to 18 weeks in December 2024. Denmark did the same in 2024. Iceland expanded to 22 weeks in 2019. Ireland overturned a constitutional ban by popular referendum in 2018 with 66% in favor. Argentina legalized abortion to 14 weeks in 2020. Colombia to 24 weeks in 2022. Mexico's Supreme Court decriminalized nationally in 2023. These are not fringe positions — they are where the world's democracies have arrived after looking at the evidence.

IVF: Universal Coverage in Europe, Unaffordable in America

CountryFunded CyclesPatient Out-of-Pocket Cost
France4 per child attemptEffectively €0
Denmark6 (first child)Medications only
Belgium6 full cyclesFully covered
Sweden3 cycles~$250 total
United States0 federal mandate$12,000–$25,000+ per cycle

Access + Contraception = Fewer Abortions

Countries that combine easy abortion access with easy contraception access produce the lowest abortion rates. Broadly legal countries average 34 abortions per 1,000 women. Restricted countries average 37. Latin America — one of the most restrictive regions — has the highest regional rate at 44. Bans do not reduce abortions. They make them more dangerous, more expensive, and more traumatic while producing no improvement in the metric used to justify them.

Sources: Canada.ca — canada.ca · CFR — cfr.org · Guttmacher — guttmacher.org · Euronews — euronews.com

Section 05

Our Policy — Ten Pillars

Ten pillars, each addressing a distinct failure of the current system. The foundation is federal codification. Everything else builds on the principle that medical decisions belong to patients and their physicians — not legislators, prosecutors, or courts.

Pillar 1 — Flagship Federal Reproductive Rights Act

92.8% of abortions occur in the first trimester. Only 1.1% occur after 21 weeks — overwhelmingly for severe fetal anomalies or life-threatening conditions. Canada has operated without any gestational limit for 36 years; its late-term rate is 1.3%, effectively identical to the US. No gestational limit does not mean unlimited late-term abortion. It means trusting doctors to make medical decisions.

  • Codify the right to abortion in federal law with no government-imposed gestational limit — decisions on timing rest with the patient and physician
  • Preempt all state criminal prohibitions, mandatory waiting periods, TRAP laws, and counseling mandates containing medically inaccurate information
  • No legislator can write a statute that anticipates every clinical scenario — the law must leave medicine to medicine
  • Mirrors the Canadian model: the country with 36 years of proof that this approach produces better outcomes
Pillar 2 Repeal the Hyde Amendment

The Hyde Amendment forces the government to pay up to $13,590 for a Medicaid birth while prohibiting it from paying $625 for an abortion. This is not fiscal conservatism — it is ideological punishment of the poorest women in the country.

  • End the two-tiered system — Medicaid covers abortion on the same terms as every other medical procedure
  • Every other procedure a person might need — vasectomies, Viagra, knee replacements — is covered; only abortion is singled out
  • 62% of Black women below the poverty line are insured through Medicaid; Hyde is inseparable from racial justice (see Issue 22)
  • Net fiscal result: savings — government pays for the less expensive outcome instead of the more expensive one
Pillar 3 Universal Free Contraception

Every $1 spent on family planning saves $7.09 in government costs. Colorado's free long-acting reversible contraception program cut teen births 57% and teen abortions 42%. The UK provides all contraception free through the NHS. Countries with easy access to both contraception and abortion produce the lowest abortion rates in the world.

  • All FDA-approved contraception free for every American — no copays, no prescription barriers for basic methods, no age restrictions
  • Prohibit insurers from imposing cost-sharing on contraception of any type
  • Over-the-counter access for appropriate methods without requiring a physician visit
  • This is the single most effective abortion-reduction policy available — proven across multiple countries and states
Pillar 4 Protect and Expand Medication Abortion

Medication abortion represents 63% of all US abortions as of 2023, up from 53% in 2020. Mifepristone has a 25-year safety record that independent research has found superior to Tylenol and penicillin on standard risk metrics. Attempts to restrict it are not medical — they are political.

  • Codify FDA authority over mifepristone approval — no state may reclassify FDA-approved medications as controlled substances for political purposes
  • Federal shield law for telehealth abortion providers operating across state lines
  • Repeal the Comstock Act's applicability to medical materials — an 1873 law should not govern 21st-century medicine
  • Guarantee pharmacy dispensing access in all states where abortion is legal — no pharmacy refusal rights for FDA-approved medications
Pillar 5 Ban Fetal Personhood Laws

Alabama's 2024 ruling that frozen IVF embryos are "children" immediately shut down three IVF clinics. 412 women faced criminal charges related to pregnancy outcomes in just the first two years after Dobbs. Personhood laws don't stop at abortion — they criminalize IUDs, emergency contraception, IVF, and miscarriage.

  • Federal legislation establishing that legal personhood begins at birth — not at conception, implantation, or any gestational milestone
  • Block the IVF threat permanently — no embryo can be classified as a legal person under any state or federal law
  • Prohibit the prosecution of any woman in connection with a pregnancy outcome, miscarriage, stillbirth, or reproductive medical decision
  • Ban "Baby Olivia" laws and fetal personhood curriculum mandates in any federally funded school
Pillar 6 Federal IVF Coverage Mandate

The US charges $12,000–$25,000 per IVF cycle with no federal mandate — 271% above the 25-country average. France covers 4 cycles free. Denmark covers 6. Belgium covers 6. Only 15 states mandate any coverage, most riddled with exemptions that make them effectively meaningless.

  • Require all health insurance plans to cover a minimum of 3 IVF cycles per child attempt, including medications
  • IVF-conceived children represent an estimated net lifetime tax contribution of approximately $606,200 — coverage is economically positive
  • No exemptions for religious employers — IVF is not a matter of faith; it is medicine
  • Cover all ART (assisted reproductive technology) — not just IVF, but intrauterine insemination and embryo cryopreservation
Pillar 7 Comprehensive Sex Education Mandate

Abstinence-only programs show no statistically significant reduction in teen pregnancy rates. Comprehensive sex education reduces teen births by 3%+ at the county level (PNAS causal evidence). Combined with universal free contraception, this is the most effective abortion-reduction framework available.

  • Require evidence-based, medically accurate, comprehensive sex education in all federally funded schools
  • End federal funding for abstinence-only programs — they do not work and the evidence is unambiguous
  • Prohibit "Baby Olivia" mandates and any fetal personhood content requirements in public school curriculum
  • Age-appropriate curriculum covering contraception, consent, healthy relationships, and reproductive anatomy
Pillar 8 Emergency Maternal Health Act

Amber Thurman, Candi Miller, Nevaeh Crain, Porsha Ngumezi — documented, named, confirmed preventable. They died because physicians feared prosecution more than they feared their patients dying. No woman should die because a politician overruled her doctor.

  • Federal law requiring hospitals receiving Medicare/Medicaid funds to provide emergency abortion care regardless of state law — EMTALA enforcement with teeth
  • Ban states from prosecuting physicians for providing standard-of-care treatment for miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, sepsis, or any pregnancy complication
  • Establish a federal rapid-response legal defense fund for physicians charged under state abortion laws while providing emergency care
  • Require hospitals in ban states to transfer patients requiring emergency abortion care — no hospital may be the last stop on a preventable death
Pillar 9 Close the Maternal Mortality Gap

The US has the worst maternal mortality of any wealthy nation at 18.6 per 100,000. Norway: zero. Over 80% of US maternal deaths are preventable. Black women die at 3.5× the rate of white women — a gap that is widening, not closing.

  • Triple the midwifery workforce — countries with the best maternal outcomes use midwife-led care as standard; the US has among the lowest midwife-to-birth ratios in the developed world
  • Dedicated Maternal Health Equity Fund targeting the Black maternal mortality crisis through community-based doula programs, mandatory implicit bias training, and culturally competent care requirements
  • Universal postpartum home visiting within 48 hours of discharge and weekly for 6 weeks — 65% of maternal deaths occur in the postpartum period
  • Extend postpartum Medicaid coverage to 12 months in all states — most states currently end coverage at 60 days when risk remains highest
  • Federal paid parental leave (12 weeks minimum) as established in Issue 13: Labor
Pillar 10 Restore and Permanently Fund Title X

Title X serves 2.8 million patients annually, 83% below 250% of the poverty line. Planned Parenthood provides cancer screenings to over 1 million people per year — only 3% of its services are abortion-related. Defunding these programs does not reduce abortions; it increases unintended pregnancies, which increases abortions.

  • Permanently authorize and fully fund Title X at $500 million per year — up from $286 million, reflecting decades of inadequate funding
  • Prohibit gag rules or ideological restrictions on what Title X providers may discuss with patients
  • Prohibit any administration from excluding qualified providers, including Planned Parenthood, based on whether they separately provide abortion services with non-federal funds
  • Expand Title X infrastructure in the 14 states that still refuse Medicaid expansion — they are the states with the greatest unmet need
Section 06

How We Pay For It

Reproductive healthcare is among the most cost-effective investments in public health. Most of these policies save money rather than cost it. The framework is fiscally positive — it redirects spending from more expensive outcomes to less expensive ones, and unlocks economic participation that restrictions suppress.

Cost summary: Contraception expansion costs an estimated $2–3 billion per year — but every $1 invested in publicly funded family planning saves $7.09 in Medicaid and other government costs (Guttmacher Institute). IVF coverage mandates add an estimated $1–2 billion per year in insurance costs. Clinic protection and Title X expansion: $500 million per year. Unintended pregnancies currently cost the US an estimated $21 billion per year in public expenditures (Brookings Institution). The offsets dwarf the outlays.

PolicyFiscal PositionMechanism
Repeal Hyde Amendment Net savings Medicaid abortion ($568–$625) costs ~96% less than a Medicaid birth ($9,131–$13,590)
Universal free contraception ~$2–3B/yr; $7.09 saved per $1 spent Prevents 2.2 million unintended pregnancies per year, including 760,000 abortions. Every $1 in family planning saves $7 (Guttmacher Institute)
Title X at $500M/year $214M annual increase Offset by savings from prevented unintended pregnancies and reduced emergency care costs
IVF coverage mandate ~$1–2B/yr insurance cost Net lifetime tax contribution of ~$606,200 per IVF-conceived child — economically positive
Comprehensive sex education Minimal federal cost Redirect existing abstinence-only funding; reduces teen births 3%+ at county level
Maternal mortality programs ~$2–3B/year Midwifery expansion, doula programs, postpartum home visits, Maternal Health Equity Fund
Clinic protection & Title X ~$500M/year Physical security, legal defense, and full Title X authorization — offset by unintended pregnancy prevention
EMTALA enforcement Regulatory cost Strengthens existing federal obligation; penalty revenue from non-compliant hospitals offsets enforcement cost

The net fiscal position is strongly positive. Unintended pregnancies cost the US $21 billion per year in public expenditures (Brookings). Abortion restrictions cost the economy $105–$133 billion per year in lost productivity, reduced labor force participation, and lower lifetime earnings. Lifting restrictions would add approximately 505,000 women to the labor force and boost GDP by 0.5%. The maternal mortality crisis costs billions in preventable deaths, litigation, and lost economic output. Prevention is not just the right thing to do — it is the less expensive thing to do.

Sources: Milbank Quarterly — pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov · Third Way — thirdway.org · IWPR — iwpr.org

Section 07

Implementation Timeline

Phase 1 — Days 1–100
Emergency Restoration and Federal Codification
Introduce the Federal Reproductive Rights Act. Executive order strengthening EMTALA enforcement — hospitals receiving federal funds must provide emergency abortion care. Reverse all gag rules on Title X providers. Restore Planned Parenthood's full Title X eligibility. Codify FDA authority over mifepristone by executive directive. Repeal any pending administrative restrictions on medication abortion.
Phase 2 — Months 4–12
Legislative Package — Rights, Access, Coverage
Pass Hyde Amendment repeal. Enact universal contraception mandate — no copays, no barriers. Pass federal IVF coverage mandate (3 cycles minimum) and ban fetal personhood laws. Enact comprehensive sex education mandate redirecting abstinence-only funding. Establish the Maternal Health Equity Fund. Expand Title X authorization to $500M per year.
Phase 3 — Years 1–2
Infrastructure and Systemic Reform
Repeal Comstock Act applicability to medical materials. Establish federal shield laws for telehealth abortion providers operating across state lines. Begin midwifery workforce expansion — federal training pipeline and loan forgiveness. Launch postpartum home visiting program nationally. Postpartum Medicaid extended to 12 months in all states.
Phase 4 — Years 2–4
Full Operational Implementation
Universal contraception fully operational — all pharmacies, all plans, zero cost-sharing. All maternal mortality programs at full capacity. Midwifery workforce expansion producing measurable results. Measurable reductions in maternal mortality and racial disparities — with specific targets: Black maternal mortality below 30/100K by year 4, overall US rate below 14/100K by year 4.
Section 08

Addressing Counterarguments

"You're supporting abortion up to birth."
92.8% of abortions occur in the first trimester. Only 1.1% occur after 21 weeks — overwhelmingly for devastating fetal anomalies or life-threatening conditions. No gestational limit does not mean no late-term abortions will be prevented. It means that the physician and patient decide — not the legislature. Canada has operated with no gestational limit for 36 years. Its late-term rate is 1.3%, essentially identical to the US. The claim has been tested in the real world for over three decades and has not materialized anywhere.
"What about the rights of the unborn?"
This position has religious roots, not medical ones. A fertilized egg is not a person — and treating it as one criminalizes IVF, bans IUDs and Plan B, and turns every miscarriage into a potential crime scene. 412 women were criminally charged in connection with pregnancy outcomes in just the first two years after Dobbs. The logical endpoint of fetal personhood is state surveillance of every pregnancy and prosecution of every loss. That is not a protection of rights — it is a transfer of bodily autonomy from the woman to the state.
"Abortion is used as birth control."
60% of women seeking abortions already have children. 41% live below the poverty line. The Turnaway Study — a rigorous longitudinal research project — proved that women denied abortions are four times more likely to fall into poverty than women who received them. Making contraception universally free, as this platform does, is the proven mechanism for reducing abortion rates. Countries with the easiest access to both contraception and abortion have the lowest rates in the world. The accusation inverts the evidence: the policies that reduce abortion are the ones opponents of this platform oppose.
"Taxpayers shouldn't fund abortion."
Taxpayers already fund the alternative. A Medicaid birth costs up to $13,590. A Medicaid abortion costs $625. The Hyde Amendment does not save money — it forces the government to pay for the more expensive outcome on ideological grounds. Every other procedure a Medicaid patient might need — vasectomies, Viagra, knee replacements — is covered. Only abortion is specifically excluded. The singling-out is not fiscal; it is punitive. And the people being punished are the poorest women in the country.
"States should decide."
When states decided, women died. Amber Thurman, Candi Miller, Nevaeh Crain, Porsha Ngumezi — documented, named, confirmed preventable by the state medical review committees operating under the same laws that killed them. Voters in Kansas, Ohio, Missouri, Arizona, and Montana overruled their own legislatures by direct referendum the first chance they had. "States' rights" in this context is a euphemism for minority rule through gerrymandered legislatures that have been systematically overruled whenever voters have a direct say.
"Won't this be politically impossible?"
11 of 14 state ballot measures have gone in favor of abortion rights since Dobbs — including Kansas (59%), Ohio (57%), Missouri (51.6%), and Montana (57.8%). France constitutionalized abortion by a vote of 780 to 72. The political risk is not in supporting reproductive freedom — it is in opposing it. Every ballot measure result confirms what polling has shown consistently for decades: a majority of Americans support abortion rights in the first trimester, and a majority oppose the total bans that 13 states currently enforce.

Sources: CDC — cdc.gov · ANSIRH Turnaway Study — ansirh.org · Guttmacher — guttmacher.org

Section 09

Key Statistics

Voters Have Decided — Every Time They Were Asked

Kansas
59%
For abortion rights — the state that most surprised pundits
Montana
57.8%
For abortion rights — a state Trump won by 16 points
Ohio
57%
For abortion rights — after a campaign of deliberate misinformation
Missouri
51.6%
For abortion rights — in a deep-red state with a near-total ban
Arizona
61.6%
For abortion rights — among the strongest margins in the series
Overall Record
11 / 14
State ballot measures won for abortion rights since Dobbs

The Evidence Base

StatisticFigureSource
Abortions in first trimester92.8%CDC Abortion Surveillance
Abortions at or after 21 weeks1.1% (fetal anomaly / emergencies)CDC
Women who say it was the right decision (5 years later)95%ANSIRH Turnaway Study
Increased poverty risk for women denied abortions4× more likelyAJPH / Turnaway Study
Medicaid women forced to carry due to Hyde1 in 4Guttmacher Institute
Return on family planning investment$7.09 saved per $1 spentMilbank Quarterly
US maternal mortality (2023)18.6 per 100,000CDC
Black maternal mortality vs. white50.3 vs. 14.5 per 100K (3.5×)CDC
US maternal deaths that are preventable80%+Commonwealth Fund
Texas maternal mortality increase (year 1 of ban)+56%GEPI
Criminal pregnancy cases in 2 years post-Dobbs412Pregnancy Justice
Economic cost of abortion restrictions (annual)$105–$133 billionThird Way / IWPR
Women added to labor force if restrictions lifted505,000Third Way
Countries that liberalized since 199460+Center for Reproductive Rights
Countries that rolled back since 19944 (incl. US)Center for Reproductive Rights
Section 10

Cross-References

Reproductive autonomy does not exist in isolation. Economic security, healthcare access, educational opportunity, and racial justice all shape when and whether a pregnancy is sustainable — and what options a woman has when it is not.

Issue 1
Healthcare — Medicare for All Universal healthcare eliminates insurance-based barriers to reproductive care. Medicare for All covers all reproductive services, including contraception, abortion, IVF, and maternal care — without cost-sharing, network restrictions, or coverage gaps.
Issue 2
Taxation Progressive tax framework funds maternal mortality programs, Title X expansion, midwifery workforce development, and contraception access — the revenue side of the reproductive health investment.
Issue 4
Education Comprehensive sex education mandate is embedded in this platform. Free university reduces the economic pressure that drives unintended pregnancies — financial precarity and unwanted pregnancy are directly linked.
Issue 13
Labor & Unions Federal paid parental leave (12 weeks minimum) directly supports maternal health outcomes. The ability to take paid leave after birth is inseparable from maternal and infant wellbeing.
Issue 15
Social Safety Net Medicaid expansion and postpartum coverage are co-dependent with this platform. Economic security reduces abortion rates more reliably than criminal restrictions — the Turnaway Study proved it.
Issue 17
LGBTQ+ Rights The bodily autonomy framework extends to gender-affirming care. The same principle applies: medical decisions belong to patients and their doctors, not to legislators or prosecutors.
Issue 22
Racial Justice Black maternal mortality is a racial justice emergency. The Hyde Amendment disparately impacts women of color. Both require targeted intervention — the Maternal Health Equity Fund is the delivery mechanism.
"This is between a woman and her doctor. The government has no place here. Religion has no place here. Politicians have no place here. The evidence has spoken in 60 countries, in 11 ballot measures, in the names of the women we have already lost. We know what works. We choose to do it."
— The Common Good Party
Paid for by The Common Good Party (thecommongoodparty.com) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.