Texas is likely to join Wisconsin and Ohio as the latest states to place new restrictions on women’s access to reproductive care, and as one provider said on Saturday’s Melissa Harris-Perry, this will have serious effects on the most vulnerable residents of the state.
Out of more than 40 clinics, only five would be able to remain open if the bills passed, all of which would be located in urban areas, and as guest Amy Hagstrom Miller, president and CEO of Whole Woman’s Health, an organization that runs five women’s clinics in Texas, pointed out, “Texas already has some of the most onerous regulations for abortion facilities in the country.”
Hagstrom Miller described the potential effects of the bills as devastating. “This will disproportionately affect women of color,” she said. No matter what conservatives argue, abortion is “mainstream medicine and is very necessary for the health and safety of women in Texas.”








