As we mark the two-year anniversary of the Supreme Courtโs decision to strike down Roe v. Wade and upend a womanโs right to choose in this country, the fight continues to prevent anti-choice politicians from further eroding womenโs rights โ even in pro-choice states like Nevada.
Here in Nevada, we proudly believe that a womanโs health care decisions should be made between her and her doctor, not determined by politicians. I remember back in 1990, when Nevadans overwhelmingly voted to codify abortion protections into our state law and protect womenโs reproductive rights. Women of all different backgrounds came together to encourage their neighbors to vote โYesโ on the ballot referendum, guaranteeing that in Nevada, a woman would always have the right to choose.ย
Nearly 35 years later, the vast majority of Nevadans โ including Democrats, Republicans, and independents โ still believe the government has no place in a womanโs health care decisions. Despite Nevadaโs protections of reproductive rights, weโve seen how anti-abortion extremists at both the federal and state levels are working to make it harder to access essential reproductive care in our state and across the country.
Anti-choice politicians are trying to bar women from traveling across state lines to receive basic health care. They want to stop women who serve our country in the military from getting the abortion care they need. Theyโve proposed a bill in the Senate that would ban abortion nationwide. And now, the far right is coming after another essential form of health care: in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Earlier this year, an Alabama Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos are considered people, raising concerns about the legality of IVF. In Nevada and across the country, women rely on IVF to start and grow their families. They make that choice in consultation with their partners, their families, and their doctors. There is no logical reason to deny women this right.ย
In the wake of the Alabama decision, my pro-choice colleagues and I knew we had to take action to ensure millions of women in the United States could still pursue parenthood through IVF. Thatโs why we attempted to pass the Right to IVF Act in the Senate.ย
This bill would establish a nationwide right for patients to use IVF, a right for doctors to provide proper IVF treatment, and a right for insurance carriers to cover IVF. It would also expand coverage of fertility treatments for servicemembers and veterans, and I am continuing to work with my colleagues to make sure it best serves our hardworking families.ย Itโs simple: my Democratic colleagues and I want to make it crystal clear that we will protect womenโs right to grow their families through IVF.
Unfortunately, anti-choice Republicans blocked our bill from passing the Senate. These senators claim to be โpro-life.โ They claim to champion family planning. But when it comes down to it, they donโt support it. Instead, they continue to show us just how far theyโll go to undermine womenโs rights.ย
Nevada women, along with my pro-choice colleagues and I, see right through the tactics of anti-choice politicians, and we know they wonโt stop trying to roll back womenโs rights. So, weโre fighting back.ย
Weโve introduced legislation like the Womenโs Health Protection Act to codify the right to choose nationwide, my Freedom to Travel for Health Care Act to protect womenโs right to travel to a different state to get the health care they need, and the Stop Comstock Act to repeal a law that anti-abortion extremists could misuse to ban abortion nationwide. I also pushed to ensure Walgreens and CVS stores across the country are distributing the abortion pill, mifepristone.
In the two years since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, millions of women have found themselves with fewer rights than their mothers and grandmothers once had. I will never stop fighting for them, and I will never stop fighting to protect a womanโs right to choose in Nevada.



















