Skip to main content
GWGovwatch
CongressBillsCommitteesPresidentMoneyPulseMisconductElectionsMap
Donate

Weekly accountability digest

One email a week with new votes, moving bills, and misconduct updates. No spam.

GW

Govwatch. Public data about Congress, in one place, in plain English.

Built with public data. Not affiliated with the U.S. government.

Explore

  • Officials
  • Legislation
  • Committees
  • Congress Pulse
  • Trending Topics
  • Bipartisan Leaderboard
  • Weekly Digest
  • Misconduct
  • Predictions

Learn

  • How Congress Works
  • How a Bill Becomes Law
  • Campaign Finance 101
  • Glossary

Tools

  • My Representatives
  • Compare Members
  • Bill Watchlist
  • Search
  • District Map
  • Follow the Money
  • Watch Live

Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Corrections
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Data Sources

Congress.gov API v3
Bills, members, votes
GovInfo API
Floor speeches, reports, bill text
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
Campaign finance
VoteView (UCLA)
Ideology scores (DW-NOMINATE)
GovTrack.us
Misconduct data (CC0)
U.S. Census Bureau
District demographics
Support This Project

This site is free. Donations help cover hosting, API fees, and keeping the data fresh.

All data is sourced from official government APIs and public records. This site is for informational purposes only.

© 2026 Govwatch

Press ReleaseNeutral2026-05-11

Lizzie Fletcher Fires Back on Abortion Pill Fight After Supreme Court Ruling

Lizzie Fletcher
Lizzie Fletcher
DTX-7 · Representative
Share:
HealthcareAbortion

Context

This press release from Representative Lizzie Fletcher (D-TX) was published on 2026-05-11 and titled "Lizzie Fletcher Fires Back on Abortion Pill Fight After Supreme Court Ruling".

Full Text

Lizzie Fletcher Fires Back on Abortion Pill Fight After Supreme Court Ruling

Following last week’s Supreme Court decision to temporarily allow abortion pills to be received via mail, Representative Lizzie Fletcher (D-TX) introduced a bill today that reaffirms the pill’s U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval. The recent Supreme Court ruling temporarily blocked a lower-court decision to restrict access to Mifepristone, also known as the abortion pill. For now, this means any patient can receive the medication by mail and through telehealth providers. Rep. Fletcher, the Vice Chair and Whip of the Reproductive Freedom Caucus, is pushing the Protecting Reproductive Freedom Act to argue that, since the FDA approved Mifepristone, this overrides state abortion-pill bans or restrictions. “More than 25 years ago, the FDA approved Mifepristone as safe and effective,” Rep. Fletcher said. "That science has not changed.” Instead, Rep. Fletcher said what has changed is the effort by anti-abortion activists to use the courts to achieve what they couldn’t legislatively. “[Anti-abortion activists want to] ban abortion across the country, one medication at a time.” In Texas, the debate over abortion access remains deeply divisive. Texas Politics recently reported on Rep. Brandon Gill’s (R-TX) questioning over another piece of reproductive rights legislation, in which he called abortion “evil and barbaric.” Rep. Pat Ryan (D-NY) is also advocating for this bill, and agreed that the pill’s scientific backing and FDA approval should be the only considerations for its legality. “These efforts to undermine the safety of abortion medication have nothing to do with science or medicine and everything to do with radical groups whose only goal is a national abortion ban,” Rep. Ryan said. Rep. Ryan said a woman’s right to choose is a part of “fundamental American freedoms,” and no law should prevent her from exercising those rights. “These deeply personal and private medical decisions should be made by women, their health care providers and their families, not by extremist judges or politicians,” Rep. Ryan said. View this article in Texas Politics.
View original source →