Congressional Digest

    Pros and Cons of the Right to Contraception Act

September 23, 2024

On June 5, Senate Democrats forced a vote on the Right to Contraception Act, which would protect a  person’s right to access contraceptives and health care  providers’ ability to provide contraception, along with  related services and information.  

The bill, led by Sens. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Mazie  Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), de fines contraceptives as “any drug, device, or biological  product intended for use in the prevention of pregnan cy.” The definition includes emergency contraception like  Plan B as well as birth control pills, intrauterine devices  and other proactive birth control methods. 

The Senate vote resulted in a 51-39 majority, but the  act lacked the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster.  According to reports, Democrats forced the vote to get  Republicans’ stance on contraception on the record before  the presidential election. Republicans characterized the  vote as an unnecessary political stunt.  

“There’s no real opposition to contraception any where in the United States Senate or around the country,  so I think it’s pretty much a non-issue,” said Sen. Roger  Wicker (R-Miss.), who voted against the act. “It’s a show  vote to deflect attention from the huge wave of inflation  caused by the Democrats, the utter failure of their plan  at the border and their lack of taking care of our national  security needs.”  

Other Republicans who opposed the act said they  support access to contraceptives but agreed with Wicker  that the legislation is unnecessary. “The Democrats are  using their power to push an alarmist and false narrative  that there is a problem accessing contraception,” said  Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.). Nearly two dozen Republican  senators signed a letter accusing Democrats of “fearmongering on this important issue to score cheap political  points.” Other Republican legislators voiced concerns  that the legislation would force Catholic schools or other  religious institutions to provide birth control or gender 

affirming care to students or employees. In an interview,  Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said “a judge could basically  force Catholic schools and others to violate their religious  conscience.” 

In the final vote, 38 Republicans opposed the act  while two Republicans voted for the act — Sens. Su san Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska).  Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) was  the only Democrat to vote no. He changed his vote so he could bring the bill up for another vote in the future.  While Democrats did not expect the bill to pass, they  continue to maintain that access to contraceptives is legitimately under threat. 

The bill cites a concurring opinion Supreme Court  Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in 2022 for the Dobbs v.  Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision that the  court “should reconsider” other precedents in cases like  Griswold v. Connecticut, a decision that gave married  couples the right to use contraception. Former President  Donald Trump said, if reelected, he would consider restrictions to birth control, a position he has walked back. On the state level, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin  blocked a bill protecting the right to access contraception,  saying he supports the right to birth control but that “we  cannot trample on the religious freedoms of Virginians.”  In Tennessee, Republicans blocked a bill that would have  clarified that the state’s abortion ban doesn’t apply to  emergency contraception.  

The public’s misunderstanding of how emergency  contraception works also may threaten access. Some  states with significant abortion restrictions define a pregnancy as beginning at fertilization (the medical definition requires the egg to be implanted), and many people  mistakenly believe that Plan B — the “morning-after”  emergency contraceptive — prevents the implantation  of a fertilized egg. 

When Missouri’s abortion restrictions went into effect, a major hospital stopped providing Plan B out of  concern it would be prosecuted if the state misunderstood  how Plan B works. The governor’s office clarified that  Plan B would not be affected by the ban. But in states  with near-total abortion bans, even though emergency  contraception remains legal, the use of Plan B has fallen  by 60% due to clinic closures and misinformation. 

“The right to contraception is the right to essential  health care, yet extremist judges and radical Republicans continue to threaten access for millions of Americans,” Markey said in a statement. “We cannot stand by  as extremists continue to undo decades of precedent and  progress.” 

Rep. Kathy Manning (D-N.C.), who helped introduce  the act in the House, added, “Birth control is key to ensuring that women are in control of their own health, bodies  and futures. … Americans should have the right to access all forms of FDA-approved birth control.”

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