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VisitNext major reproductive rights bill introduced in Senate
Right to Contraception Act • 33%
Federal Protection for Abortion Access • 33%
Other reproductive rights legislation • 33%
Official legislative records of the U.S. Senate
Senate Fails to Pass Right to Contraception Act in 51-39 Vote Amid Partisan Divide
Jun 5, 2024, 04:20 PM
The U.S. Senate recently voted on the Right to Contraception Act, a bill aimed at safeguarding access to contraceptives nationwide. The bill failed to pass the cloture vote, receiving a 51-39 vote, falling short of the 60 votes needed. Republican Senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski were the only members of their party to vote in favor of advancing the bill. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, who initially supported the bill, changed his vote to 'no' to retain the ability to bring the bill up for a vote again in the future. This vote comes amid a broader push by Democrats to focus public attention on reproductive rights, especially as the second anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade approaches. Senator Ed Markey challenged Republicans to go on the record opposing the federal right to guarantee access to contraception. The failure of the bill highlights the ongoing partisan divide over reproductive health care, with Democrats vowing to continue their fight to protect access to contraception and other reproductive rights.
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New bans enacted • 33%
Existing bans reinforced • 33%
Bans reversed or blocked • 34%
Additional menopause-related bills introduced • 33%
No further legislative action • 33%
Revisions or amendments to the original bill • 34%
Adoption of similar state laws • 25%
Rejection or non-compliance • 25%
Creation of stricter laws • 25%
No significant legislative action • 25%
Nationwide ban • 25%
Increased restrictions • 25%
No change • 25%
Expanded access • 25%
1-5 states • 25%
6-10 states • 25%
11-15 states • 25%
More than 15 states • 25%
Passes with strong majority • 33%
Passes with narrow majority • 33%
Fails to pass • 34%
Fails with 50-59 votes • 33%
Passes with 60+ votes • 33%
Fails with less than 50 votes • 33%