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Vice President Kamala Harris spoke Thursday in Milwaukee to the Democratic Attorneys General Association. Vice President also briefly met with UW-Milwaukee students and Latino leaders.
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The proposal would allow voters to shape state law through referendum on any number of issues — not just abortion.
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People leaving Wisconsin to seek an abortion are met by the high costs of travel, food and the task of finding childcare services on top of paying for their medical care. Two Midwest organizations are helping offset the indirect costs of seeking an abortion.
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Planned Parenthood of Illinois is combining forces with its Wisconsin counterpart to help patients travel to get abortions following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.
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Stephanie Findley is a doctor of behavioral health at the Findley Foundation’s medical clinic. She shares how the overturning of Roe v. Wade has affected her clinic’s work and how this will disproportionately impact people of color.
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Dr. Jesse Ehrenfeld of the Medical College of Wisconsin talks about health care needs after the overtuning of Roe v. Wade.
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Dr. Kathy King is the medical director of Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin and has spent the week working toward getting her license in Illinois to continue helping Wisconsin women access health care. She shares more about her concerns and next steps as an abortion provider.
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The Wisconsin Medical Society put out a statement just after Roe v. Wade was overturned asking for Wisconsin leaders to clarify the states 1849 abortion law and stating their belief that decisions over medical care should be limited to a patient and their physician.
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A local anti-abortion group responds that the state leaders' lawsuit against the 1849 law is disappointing.
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The end of Roe v. Wade has plunged much of the U.S. into a state of confusion and legal limbo. In Wisconsin, an 1849 law making nearly all abortions illegal is likely in effect. To get some clarity on what this law could mean for pregnant people in Wisconsin, Barbara Zabawa, a lawyer and clinical assistant professor at UW-Milwaukee for the College of Health Sciences, shares more.