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Audacy | Should you be stocking up on condoms?
Rebecca Hart Holder, president of the Reproductive Equity Now group said that the GOP blockade of contraception rights should alert voters of “what is at stake this November,” and she called for an end to the filibuster to protect reproductive health.

Common Dreams | Showing 'What's at Stake in November,' Senate GOP Blocks Right to Contraception Act
Reproductive Equity Now similarly warned on social media that "it's obvious from today's vote that anti-abortion extremists will not stop at banning abortion. They will attempt to block our access to birth control, attack IVF, eliminate LGBTQ+ healthcare, and decimate our reproductive autonomy. This is what's at stake in November."
BU Daily Free Press | Two years post-Roe: Greater Boston assesses local impact, looks ahead to November
Taylor St. Germain, communications director of Reproductive Equity Now, an organization that aims to provide equitable reproductive healthcare access for all people in New England, said she thinks voters will “rise up” and go to the polls “in droves to support abortion access” this November.
“Reproductive freedom is on the line in every single election up and down the ballot in every state across the country,” St. Germain said.

Boston Globe | Warren, Markey speak to threats facing national abortion access at Boston hearing
Rebecca Hart Holder, president of Reproductive Equity Now, said Massachusetts residents have called the abortion legal hotline in recent days with “tremendous confusion about what’s legal and what’s not legal.”
She said there have been more than 120 calls to the hotline during which the organization has helped providers navigate Telehealth abortion care.
“In the face of right wing extremists, we’re going to continue to step up,” she said.
Commonwealth Beacon | Warren, Markey say Mass. not safe in national fight over abortion
Warren also said that there is a possibility that if Donald Trump becomes president he could begin enforcing an 1873 anti-vice law that bans the mailing of equipment that could be used to administer an abortion. The Comstock Act has not been applied in the last 50 years but any president could theoretically enforce it, Warren said.
The law would have a significant impact on Massachusetts, Rose said, because it would prevent providers from mailing out abortion medications to their out-of-state patients, make it difficult for pharmaceutical companies to mail abortion medication to the state, and prohibit the delivery of healthcare equipment required by abortion providers.
“It is a zombie law from 1873 that should frankly stay dead,” said Rebecca Hart Holder, the head of Reproductive Equity Now. “It is shameful that the Republicans are trying to resurrect it. It really goes to show you that they will use any means necessary to ban abortions if [Trump] does that.”
WCVB | 'Furious' Sen. Warren holds reproductive rights hearing in Boston
Testimony also pointed to a big increase in out-of-state patients seeking care in Massachusetts, leading to longer waits.
"Our clinics are contending with more patients," Holder said. "More appointments are funds paying for more care."
MassLive.com | ‘We’re not safe’: In Boston, experts, advocates warn the fight over abortion rights isn’t over
Rebecca Hart Holder, the president of the advocacy group Reproductive Equity Now, cast the current debate in even more binary terms, warning that attacks on abortion access have opened the door to attacks on marriage rights, gender equity, and other privacy-related protections Americans take for granted.
“If you look at a Venn Diagram of the antiabortion movement and the anti-gender equity movement, it is a circle,” she said.
NBC 10 Boston | Warren, Markey spotlight reproductive rights in field hearing
Attorney General Andrea Campbell, ACLU of Massachusetts Executive Director Carol Rose, Reproductive Equity Now President Rebecca Hart Holder, Brigham and Women's Hospital physician Dr. Kathryn Fay, and U.S. Sen. Edward Markey are expected to participate as the Economic Policy Subcommittee that Warren chairs convenes a hearing titled "The Economic and Health Impacts of Threats to Reproductive Rights."
State House News Service | Maternal health bill poised for breakthrough in legislature
“I think it’s hugely significant that these bills have made it to Ways and Means. It’s definitely some recognition from the Legislature, I think, of really a critical juncture we’re facing,” said Claire Teylouni, director of governmental affairs at Reproductive Equity Now, as she invoked the worsening maternal health crisis and a growing volume of home births.
CT Mirror | CT bill on providing reproductive care info at religious hospitals dies
“We’re disappointed,” said Liz Gustafson, Connecticut state director of Reproductive Equity Now. “We, as advocates, knew, going into this short legislative session, that we were all working against the clock.
“We’re encouraged that it got out of committee, and by the House and Senate co-sponsors. … We’re going to use this time to see if there’s anything we can add or adjust in the language to strengthen the bill. And we’re confident we’ll be able to get it over the finish line next session.”
WFSB | Expanded paid sick leave bill heads to the governor’s desk
“We are so grateful for the leadership of She Leads Justice, the Connecticut Working Families Party, members of the Paid Sick Days Coalition, and Sen. Julie Kushner for their tireless advocacy to expand paid sick leave to workers across Connecticut,” said Liz Gustafson, Connecticut state director of Reproductive Equity Now, an advocacy group.
The Granite Post | NH reproductive rights advocates screen film showcasing the dangers of fake Abortion clinics
Reproductive Equity NOW hosted a watch party for Pro-Choice advocates in Concord, NH. Preconceived (2024) follows two women who find themselves unexpectedly expecting and have unfortunate run-ins with fake abortion clinics, mirroring how NH has 20 known fake clinics itself.
MassLive | Who is John Deaton, the long-shot Republican trying to unseat Mass. Sen. Elizabeth Warren?
In an April 5 letter, Rebecca Hart Holder, the president of Boston-based Reproductive Equity Now, asked Deaton to clarify his position on the critical issue, writing that his “campaign website has virtually no information about your policy platform.”
Hart Holder also wrote that she was concerned about “extreme, anti-abortion statements from your senior campaign leadership.”
Politico Massachusetts Playbook | Roe Fallout
MEANWHILE — The abortion-rights advocacy group Reproductive Equity Now is urging the most prominent of Warren’s current Republican U.S. Senate rivals, John Deaton, to clarify his stance on abortion access. The group is also calling out Deaton over anti-abortion messages that his campaign manager, Michael Gorecki, posted online years ago, according to a letter that REN President Rebecca Hart Holder sent to Deaton’s campaign on Monday that was obtained by Playbook.
NBC Boston | Trump's comments on abortion met with frustration on both sides
“It’s wrong to leave people behind. One in three women live in a state with an abortion ban and our rights are not negotiable,” said Rebecca Hart of Reproductive Equity Now.
News 12 Connecticut | CT leaders 'encouraged' after Supreme Court abortion pill hearing
In Connecticut, almost two-thirds of all abortions are induced through medicine. Liz Gustafson had one six years ago.
“Because I knew then, and I still know now, just how safe and effective medication abortion is, I made a decision that was best for my circumstances,” said Gustafson, who is now the Connecticut director for Reproductive Equity Now.

Boston Globe | Warren slams abortion pill access case as ‘partisan politics’ ahead of Supreme Court arguments
“I am not at all surprised to see that the numbers are increasing in a post-Dobbs world,” said Rebecca Hart Holder, an executive director of Reproductive Equity Now. “Now that is because women and people who can get pregnant and the providers of abortion care are resilient. We shouldn’t have to be resilient, we should not have to travel for care. We should not have to have pills mailed to our homes from states like Massachusetts.”
CT Mirror | Bill would protect those at religious hospitals who offer care info
“While providers at Catholic health institutions may be barred from providing reproductive care and gender-affirming care under the institution’s directives, they can also face employment repercussions simply for giving their patients accurate information about their health and where they can access care,” Liz Gustafson, Connecticut state director of Reproductive Equity Now said in written testimony. “The lack of any information sharing about where else a patient might be able to go to seek care can lead to devastating delays. Patients may not even be aware that a health care facility would deny them both health care services and medically accurate information regarding their health.
NBC Boston | Here's why abortion will be such a big issue for the ballot come November
Rebecca Hart Holder is with the group Reproductive Equity Now. She says the issue is galvanizing for Democrats.
“Vote. That is what we have to do, “ Hart Holder told NBC10 Boston. “We have to turn out and vote and make our voices heard.”

The Boston Globe | Abortion doulas help patients navigate the fraught landscape of a post-Dobbs world
As of 2020, the majority of counties in Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Hampshire did not have an abortion clinic, according to a report from the Guttmacher Institute, and geography can likewise be a barrier in parts of Massachusetts and Maine. According to Reproductive Equity Now, crisis pregnancy centers, antiabortion facilities that have been accused of posing as reproductive health care clinics, outnumber legitimate providers in New England.