Women along the U.S.-Mexico border are about to get a major boost in access to safe and legal abortion, despite the state of Texas’s best efforts.
On Wednesday, Whole Woman’s Health — which owns clinics throughout Texas and has repeatedly gone to court to fight the state’s restrictive abortion laws — announced it would open a clinic in Las Cruces, New Mexico. That clinic will be within an hour of both El Paso, where Texas’s omnibus abortion law shut down a clinic in April, and Juarez, Mexico, where abortion is illegal. New Mexico has far fewer restrictions on abortion access, and also allows Medicaid reimbursement for the procedure.
Whole Woman’s Health also said it plans to reopen its McAllen clinic, in the Rio Grande Valley, by the end of the week. That clinic closed after being unable to get admitting privileges at a local hospital in compliance with the new law, but has been given a new lease on life, possibly temporarily, by a federal court.
“We are here to say clearly and proudly that politicians’ efforts to close our doors have not swayed us, have not discouraged us, and have not subdued us. We are more than resilient in the face of these threats,” said Whole Woman’s Health CEO Amy Hagstrom Miller on a call with reporters Wednesday.









