GOP candidates are running ads talking directly about abortion, a change from the past approach of largely ignoring the issue.
Producer and writer Shonda Rhimes campaigned for her longtime friend Vice President Kamala Harris in Philadelphia on Saturday, outlining the stakes for Black women in the upcoming election.
Wade, claiming that abortion bans are best sorted by the states instead of at a federal level. He's also expressed support for the morning-after pill and promised, without providing details, that he'd make the government and insurance companies pick up the costs of in-vitro fertilization (IVF).
Former President Donald Trump’s appeal to evangelical voters — “No one will be touching the cross of Christ under the Trump administration,” he told the National Religious Broadcasters’ convention
In a campaign they would like to center on the economy and the border, Republican candidates keep drifting back to abortion rights, an issue that favors Democrats.
Vice President and Democratic presidential nominee Kamla Harris made a quick stop in the Bay Area to attend a campaign fundraiser at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco. The visit was Harris' second since announcing her bid for the White House,
Democratic congressional hopefuls in California are highlighting the anti-abortion records of vulnerable Republican incumbents, many of whom have moderated their stances ahead of the election.
Eigel was scheduled to host an anti-Amendment 3 rally at 7 p.m. Friday at the Soda Museum in St. Charles. The proposed constitutional amendment, if passed by a majority of Missouri voters on Nov. 5, would overturn the state’s abortion ban.
Just ask his Republican opponent in the 2022 Minnesota governor's race, Dr. Scott Jensen, who was on the receiving end of Walz’s attacks — and saw firsthand how effective Walz could be in exposing an opponent's shifting positions on abortion.
Republican incumbent candidate for Florida Senate Ben Albritton addresses abortion, water quality, economy. He's in line to be next Senate president
Abortion-rights groups are courting Latino voters through door-knocking and Spanish-language ads. They say the fast-growing group could determine the outcome of abortion ballot measures across the U.S.