As some of the nation’s largest employers vow to pay their employees to travel out of state for abortions, an insurance company in Texas went viral on social media for promising to cover employees’ expenses related to having a child.
Rep. Ilhan Omar was booed over the weekend while attending a Somali music festival in her home state of Minnesota.
Mrs. Omar, the only Somali-American...
According to Operation Rescue’s first-hand investigation, over 49 abortion clinics have either halted abortions or have been forced to close their doors altogether since...
The head of the Department of Homeland Security announced Sunday that there is a “heightened threat environment” in the aftermath of recent Supreme Court decisions that were handed down.
Texas’s and Ohio’s Supreme Courts have given the go-ahead for the states to enforce their respective state laws that ban abortion, blocking efforts that barred the laws from taking effect, coming after the U.S. Supreme Court last week overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.
What happens now? That’s one of the biggest questions surrounding the U.S. Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade. With abortion requirements gone at the federal level, uncertainty abounds.