Around the country: More than 50 organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union, participated in #StopTheBans protests nationwide aimed at stopping a wave of anti-abortion laws.
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Protesters dressed like handmaids march outside Arizona State Capitol
A group of demonstrators dressed like handmaids from the TV show “The Handmaid’s Tale” with signs around their necks reading “#WarOnWomen” marched outside the Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix on Tuesday.
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Arizona has several laws on the books that restrict access to an abortion. For example, a woman in the state seeking an abortion must receive counseling and wait 24 hours before having the procedure, according to the Guttmacher Institute.
Arizona Republican Governor Doug Ducey, who says he is pro-life, said this week that he believes the abortion ban law passed in Alabama is too strict, and that he still supports “exceptions for life of the mother, rape and incest.”
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Kirsten Gillibrand: Trump will have a war on women, "and he will lose it"
Presidential candidate Kirsten Gillibrand told CNN that women “are going to fight” the anti-abortion laws. She also blamed the Trump administration for pushing them, calling it a “war on women.”
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Besides abortions, what does Planned Parenthood do?
CNN’s Elizabeth Cohen looks at the history of Planned Parenthood, and the controversy surrounding the organization’s funding for abortions.
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Bernie Sanders: "We have to do everything we can" to defend abortion rights
Senator and 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders just showed up outside the Supreme Court at the abortion ban protest.
“The right for a woman to control her own body is a fundamental constitutional right,” Sanders told CNN. “And we have got to do everything we can to defend.”
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Protesters in Philly: "My body, my choice"
Protesters with signs reading “Abortion is Healthcare” and “Vote Them Out,” and chanting “my body, my choice,” have gathered in downtown Philadelphia to protest the recent abortion bans.
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Note: Pennsylvania is not in the handful of states that recently passed abortion ban legislation. Its governor, Democrat Tom Wolf, recently announced he would “veto any anti-choice bill that lands on my desk.” The rally is one of many being held across the country.
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Kamala Harris: "I stand in solidarity with those across the country to #StopTheBans"
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Protesters at Georgia State Capitol chant, "Stand up, fight back!" and "Vote them out!"
A group of protesters carrying signs that read “Stop the bans” and “Don’t take away our care” gathered at the steps of the Georgia State Capitol building on Tuesday afternoon, targeting lawmakers who recently passed a restrictive “heartbeat” abortion law which chants of “What do we do? Stand up, fight back!”
They also chanted, “Vote them out!”
Hundreds of community members were expected to participate in the rally, with expected speakers including representatives from ACLU-Georgia, Indivisible Georgia Coalition, NARAL Pro-Choice Georgia, Planned Parenthood SE, SisterLove Inc, URGE and more.
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Mayor Pete: "I do not believe that women and their doctors should be overruled by the heavy hand of government"
CNN
South Bend Mayor and Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg just spoke to CNN’s Jessica Dean at an abortion ban protest outside the Supreme Court in Washington.
“I come from Indiana, I understand that people come to this issue differently,” Buttigieg said.
He added, “I do not believe that women and their doctors should be overruled by the heavy hand of government on an issue like this where people do have different beliefs — those beliefs are best respected in a framework — the framework that was established right here at the Supreme Court and was the law of the land for as long as I’d been alive that trust women to make these decisions.”
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This judge is skeptical of Mississippi's abortion ban — but he didn't issue a ruling
From CNN's Ariane de Vogue
A federal judge in Mississippi expressed deep skepticism on Tuesday about a state law that bans abortion as early as six weeks of pregnancy, sending a signal that a series of similar attempts across the country to pass near total bans on abortion might not withstand judicial scrutiny.
The judge did not rule from the bench, but said he would issue a ruling soon.
During a hearing, Judge Carlton Reeves expressed anger at times, especially over the fact that the law has no exception for rape or incest.
Today, Reeves questioned whether the new law “smacks of defiance” to this court.
“You said we can’t do 15 weeks so ‘by God we will do six weeks,’” Reeves said at one point. He then rhetorically asked if the state legislature would call a special session and then pass a four-week or two-week ban.
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2020 Democrats lend their support for abortion ban protests
Some 2020 Democratic presidential hopefuls are attending, or watching, today’s rallies.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, the current frontrunner according to multiple polls, just tweeted the #StopTheBans hashtag organizers have promoted.
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg will also be in attendance.
This post was updated as more candidates arrived.
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The 5 states that signed restrictive abortion bills into law this year
From CNN's Nicole Chavez
Abortion is legal under Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion in all 50 states.
But most states have set limits in one way or another.
This year, a series of strict anti-abortion bills have been passed with the intention to reshape women’s access to the procedure:
The most restrictive abortion law in the country is in Alabama. The ban makes abortion illegal in virtually all cases — including cases of rape and incest — and doctors who perform abortions could face life in prison.
Lawmakers in Georgia, Ohio, Kentucky and Mississippi also proposed so-called heartbeat bills this year and successfully got them signed into law. Those bills generally ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, which can be as early as six weeks into a pregnancy — when many women don’t yet know they’re pregnant.
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Rep. Jackie Speier says women are "being depicted as chattel" in abortion debate
From CNN's Veronica Stracqualursi
California Rep. Jackie Speier said Tuesday that women are being portrayed as property in states that have passed legislation restricting abortions and argued that government should be excluded from womens’ health decisions.
“I think that women are being depicted as chattel,” Speier said in an interview with CNN’s Alisyn Camerota on “New Day” when asked about state bills that would limit abortion procedures.
Several Republican-led states have moved to pass bills restricting abortion, including Alabama, which enacted the country’s most restrictive abortion law last week, with the hopes of them being used as a vehicle to challenge the US Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade.
“This has gotten quite absurd, and I think Alabama is just one more example of the many states that have now passed laws to treat women as if they do not have control over their bodies,” Speier told CNN.
Speier argued, “if we are going to start regulating women and their reproductive health, well maybe we should start regulating men and their reproductive health.”
Speier last week joined a number of women on social media in sharing their personal stories about abortion, saying that she underwent the procedure because it was the “best choice for my health (and) my family.”
“While it was an immensely hard decision, I don’t regret it,” she wrote on Twitter.
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Abortion rights advocates will rally in almost every state today
From CNN's Holly Yan
Protestors participate in a rally against Alabama's abortion ban on Sunday in Montgomery, Alabama.
More than 50 organizations — including the American Civil Liberties Union and NARAL Pro-Choice America — are participating in #StopTheBans protests nationwide.
He struck down Mississippi's ban on abortions after 15 weeks — so the state banned them at six
From CNN's Ariane de Vogue
It was only six months ago that federal district Judge Carlton Reeves struck down a Mississippi law that banned abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, holding that the state was “wrong on the law” and that its Legislature’s “professed interest” in women’s health amounted to “pure gaslighting.”
The state’s response was to pass an even more restrictive law in March that bans abortion as early as six weeks.
What happens now: Today Reeves, who sits on the US District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, will hear a new challenge from astonished critics who say the Legislature moved brazenly to both disregard his earlier opinion and Supreme Court precedent.