How Roe’s reversal will impact incarcerated women
Each year almost 60,000 pregnant women enter the prison system. After the fall of Roe, activists fear the already abysmal reproductive health care system could get even worse. MSNBC’s Michael Steele spoke to Deanna Hoskins, President of JustLeadershipUSA, about the reality of being pregnant behind bars and the impact the Court’s decision could have on incarcerated women.
UP NEXT
UP NEXT
-
Actress Rosie Perez looks back on iconic ‘Do the Right Thing’ role
MSNBC
-
Singer Gloria Estefan says she refused to ‘water down’ her sound early in her career
MSNBC
-
Actress Gina Torres: ‘There was no place for me as a Latina’ in Hollywood
MSNBC
-
Latina activist: The vital first step to fixing our broken immigration system
MSNBC
-
Latina trailblazers: We need to confront our political differences for democracy’s sake
MSNBC
-
The right’s ongoing refusal to concede elections
MSNBC
-
Has Hollywood set the stage for Latinophobia?
MSNBC
-
Despite dangerous consequences, Texas conservatives still use charged rhetoric toward immigrants
MSNBC
-
Rep. Veasey: It will be hard to not vote for Inflation Reduction Act in the House
MSNBC
-
Confusion over monkeypox increases as case numbers increase
MSNBC
-
White House National Climate Advisor 'dancing in the streets' over Senate's passage of historic climate bill
MSNBC
-
Rep. Zoe Lofgren on Where the Jan. 6th Committee Investigation Stands Now
MSNBC
-
Discussing the Passage of the Inflation Reduction Act and Political Headlines
MSNBC
-
Senate Democrats pass Inflation Reduction Act without a single vote from GOP Senators
MSNBC
-
Good Liars on overcrowding at CPAC and the Big Lie
MSNBC
-
Real-world impacts of landmark Inflation Reduction Act
MSNBC