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Democrat Cori Bush likens abortion pills to headache meds.

(Photo by Greg Nash-Pool/Getty Images)

OAN’s Roy Francis
8:48 AM – Thursday, July ⁤20, 2023

House‍ Oversight Democrats hosted a discussion on the impact of restricting the public’s access to the abortion pill, mifepristone, during which Democrat Representative Cori Bush made the comment comparing the pills to headache ⁣medicine.

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During the discussion on Monday⁢ on “Medication Abortion Access and⁢ Republican Efforts to⁤ Ban Abortion Nationwide,” which was led by Bush (D-Mo.) alongside Representatives Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas), Jamie ‍Raskin⁢ (D-Md.), and Reverend Love ‍Holt, a ‍Pro-Choice⁤ Missouri community engagement director, Bush downplayed the effects ⁢and seriousness of the life-ending pills.

Bush⁢ said that ⁢the pills ⁤are nothing but normal medication, ⁣comparing them⁣ to Tylenol and antibiotics, ⁢and ⁢that‍ there is ⁤no “valid medical reason” to place a ban on⁤ the abortion pills.

“Banning medication abortion would be like placing a ban on Tylenol [or] a ban on​ antibiotics,” ⁢Bush ‌said. “There is no scientific, no ⁤valid medical reason to do so. It is only political propaganda. Medication abortion is a lifeline. A lifeline for the person working ‍multiple jobs that cannot afford ⁢to take a day off work because⁢ wages are too low or they don’t have paid sick leave, ​a lifeline ⁢for the mom of​ two who cannot afford childcare or cannot find affordable childcare.”

The Congresswoman said that‍ mifepristone⁢ is ‌safe and effective ​and that such medication is‍ “no⁢ different from any ​other medication,” ​Adding that they‌ are a⁣ lifeline for those who “face transphobia and bigotry.”

“It’s a lifeline for the trans folks who face transphobia and bigotry because of anti-LGBT+⁤ laws and⁢ outrageous bans on ⁣gender-affirming care,” ‌she said.

Mifepristone is the most⁤ commonly used abortion pill in the United‌ States, with⁣ more than half of ⁣all abortions in⁣ the​ country stemming from the pill.

In ‌April, the ‍conservative legal advocacy ⁣group,​ Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), had brought a case against the ​pill to Texas⁤ Judge Matthew⁣ J. Kacsmaryk, arguing that the Food and Drug Administration⁤ (FDA) exceeded‍ its authority when it approved mifepristone ​over twenty years ago, ​in 2000.

Judge Kacsmaryk ruled⁤ in favor of the ADF and suspended the⁢ approval of mifepristone while ‍the ‌lawsuit that challenged the safety ​of the drug played out in the courts.

The ⁣discussion held on Monday was in response to the several pro-life legislations aimed⁢ at protecting the unborn that ‍have been making their way through ⁣several state legislature since the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe ‍v Wade in June 2022.

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