-
Ex-Zimbabwe cricket captain Williams treated for 'drug addiction'
-
Padres ace Darvish to miss 2026 MLB season after surgery
-
Diaz hero and villain as Bayern beat PSG in Champions League showdown
-
Liverpool master Real Madrid on Alexander-Arnold's return
-
Van de Ven back in favour as stunning strike fuels Spurs rout
-
Juve held by Sporting Lisbon in stalling Champions League campaign
-
New lawsuit alleges Spotify allows streaming fraud
-
Stocks mostly drop as tech rally fades
-
LIV Golf switching to 72-hole format in 2026: official
-
'At home' Djokovic makes winning return in Athens
-
Manchester City have become 'more beatable', says Dortmund's Gross
-
Merino brace sends Arsenal past Slavia in Champions League
-
Djokovic makes winning return in Athens
-
Napoli and Eintracht Frankfurt in Champions League stalemate
-
Arsenal's Dowman becomes youngest-ever Champions League player
-
Cheney shaped US like no other VP. Until he didn't.
-
Pakistan edge South Africa in tense ODI finish in Faisalabad
-
Brazil's Lula urges less talk, more action at COP30 climate meet
-
Barca's Lewandowski says his season starting now after injury struggles
-
Burn urges Newcastle to show their ugly side in Bilbao clash
-
French pair released after 3-year Iran jail ordeal
-
EU scrambles to seal climate targets before COP30
-
Getty Images largely loses lawsuit against UK AI firm
-
Cement maker Lafarge on trial in France over jihadist funding
-
Sculpture of Trump strapped to a cross displayed in Switzerland
-
Pakistan's Rauf and Indian skipper Yadav punished over Asia Cup behaviour
-
Libbok welcomes 'healthy' Springboks fly-half competition
-
Reeling from earthquakes, Afghans fear coming winter
-
Ronaldo reveals emotional retirement will come 'soon'
-
Munich's surfers stunned after famed river wave vanishes
-
Iran commemorates storming of US embassy with missile replicas, fake coffins
-
Gauff sweeps Paolini aside to revitalise WTA Finals defence
-
Shein vows to cooperate with France in probe over childlike sex dolls
-
Young leftist Mamdani on track to win NY vote, shaking up US politics
-
US government shutdown ties record for longest in history
-
King Tut's collection displayed for first time at Egypt's grand museum
-
Typhoon flooding kills over 40, strands thousands in central Philippines
-
Trent mural defaced ahead of Liverpool return
-
Sabalenka to face Kyrgios in 'Battle of Sexes' on December 28
-
Experts call for global panel to tackle 'inequality crisis'
-
Backed by Brussels, Zelensky urges Orban to drop veto on EU bid
-
After ECHR ruling, Turkey opposition urges pro-Kurd leader's release
-
Stocks drop as tech rally fades
-
UK far-right activist Robinson cleared of terror offence over phone access
-
World on track to dangerous warming as emissions hit record high: UN
-
Nvidia, Deutsche Telekom unveil 1-bn-euro AI industrial hub
-
Which record? Haaland warns he can get even better
-
Football star David Beckham hails knighthood as 'proudest moment'
-
Laurent Mauvignier wins France's top literary award for family saga
-
Indian Sikh pilgrims enter Pakistan, first major crossing since May conflict
US Republicans block bill protecting access to IVF
Republicans in the US Senate on Thursday blocked a bill recognizing a legal right to in vitro fertilization, introduced as part of a Democratic drive to underline threats to reproductive freedoms ahead of November's elections.
The legislation would have established a federal right to IVF -- an infertility treatment combining an egg with sperm in a lab -- and for providers to offer the procedure, with expanded insurance coverage to lower costs.
The vast majority of Americans tell pollsters IVF is morally acceptable, but the country is divided over the destruction of frozen human embryos created by the procedure.
The bill needed the support of 60 senators in a preliminary vote to get debate started but could only garner backing from 48, with just two Republicans crossing the aisle.
"All this bill does is establish a nationwide right to IVF and eliminates barriers for millions of Americans who seek IVF to have kids," Democratic majority leader Chuck Schumer said on the Senate floor.
"It's personal to me. I have a beautiful one-year-old grandson because of the miracle of IVF."
The use of IVF became a hot-button election issue after the Alabama Supreme Court ruled in February that frozen embryos were children, meaning that those who destroy them can be held liable for their death.
In a Gallup poll released Thursday, 82 percent of respondents said IVF is morally acceptable. Forty-nine percent said it is okay to destroy frozen human embryos while 43 percent said it is not.
But Republicans said the legislation went too far, and accused Democrats of staging a "show vote" to spread alarm over IVF access.
"Let's be clear: No one is trying to ban IVF. Not one senator," said Texas conservative Ted Cruz.
Reproductive rights have been an effective political cudgel for Democrats in the two years since the conservative-leaning Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that made abortion a constitutionally protected right.
The bench had been bolstered by three judges appointed by Republican former president and current candidate Donald Trump.
"Since the Court overturned Roe, in states across our nation, extremists have proposed and passed laws that threaten access not only to abortion but to contraception and IVF," Vice President Kamala Harris said in a statement.
"Donald Trump has thrown our health care system into chaos and stripped away fundamental freedoms that Americans counted on for decades."
Thursday's vote came a day after Democrats blocked a scaled-back Republican bill that would cut off Medicaid -- a government program providing health insurance for low income Americans -- for states if they banned IVF.
"Their bill would allow states to regulate IVF out of existence," said Patty Murray, one of a trio of senators who led the Democratic legislation.
V.AbuAwwad--SF-PST