Support for abortion rights ticked up after the court's Dobbs decision one year ago — and has stayed there.
If banning abortion has become less popular since, new proposals to ban or restrict medication abortion — prescription drugs sold in the form of a pill taken to end a pregnancy — engender even greater opposition.last month found that nearly three-in-four Americans, 72 percent, think abortion pills should be legal in all or most cases.
decision isn’t the only predicament facing the Supreme Court, but it’s likely a major contributor to the toll taken on the court’s once-sterling image.out this week approve of the job the Supreme Court is doing — the lowest mark recorded dating back to 2004. Nearly six-in-10, 59 percent — a similar percentage to those who disapprove of theThe court has been able to weather controversy before in a way that it doesn’t appear to be doing now.
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