Abortions are resuming at a Wyoming clinic after judge suspends laws
- Wyoming's only abortion clinic can resume providing surgical abortions after a judge suspended two state laws, one requiring clinics to be licensed as outpatient surgical centers and the other requiring ultrasounds before medication abortions.
- The clinic stopped offering abortions in February after the Republican governor signed the licensing requirement into law, citing costly renovations needed to comply.
- Abortion remains legal in Wyoming while legal challenges continue against the state's abortion bans passed since 2022, including the first explicit ban on abortion pills in the U.S.
86 Articles
86 Articles
Colorado will cover abortion for Medicaid patients, state employees as Gov. Polis signs public funding law
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed two abortion-rights bills Thursday that will permit the use of public funding to cover the procedure and provide more protection for doctors and patients from out-of-state interference. “Colorado is making sure that we are completely protecting the right to choose,” Polis said before signing the pieces of legislation into law. “At the federal level, we’re already seeing the government overreach threatening basic …


Judge blocks new Wyoming abortion laws, clearing way for Casper clinic to resume services
The new laws ‘affect a fundamental right expressly provided for by the Wyoming Constitution,’ District Judge Thomas T.C. Campbell wrote.
State lawmakers close to cracking down on possessing abortion inducing medications
Mifepristone is one of two drugs used to perform chemical abortions. While Oklahoma has long banned abortion including in cases of rape and incest, some state lawmakers believe many people are having abortions at home with pills they order off the internet. A new law is one vote away from the governor's desk that would crackdown on that.
Wyoming Judge Blocks Pro-Life Laws, Abortion Center Will Resume Killing Babies
On Monday, five days after the Wyoming Supreme Court heard oral arguments to decide whether District Judge Melissa Owens properly struck down the state’s protective “Life is a Human Right Act,” retired District Judge Thomas Campbell enjoined two state laws, one requiring abortion clinics to be licensed as ambulatory surgical centers and a second requiring ultrasounds and a 48-hour waiting period. A spokesperson for Gov. Mark Gordon declined to c…
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