Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
FILE - A green scarf with a message that reads in Spanish: "To decide is sacred, just and necessary" adorns an altar to Our Lady of Guadalupe, in the office of the Catholics for the Right to Decide, in Mexico City, Dec. 4, 2023. Members of the organization denounce the invisibility of women in some religious environments and advocate for the reinterpretation of sacred texts with a feminist perspective. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)
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Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
FILE - An activist against abortion places a fabric panel of Our Lady of Guadalupe alongside small, mock coffins at the entrance to the Supreme Court to celebrate the court's decision against an injunction in Veracruz state that aimed to decriminalize abortion for all cases within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy, in Mexico City, July 29, 2020. In most of the Mexican states where abortion has been decriminalized, abortion-rights activists say they face persistent challenges in trying to make abortion safe, accessible and government-funded. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
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Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
FILES - This combination of two file photos shows Xochitl Galvez, at left, arriving to register her name as a presidential candidate on July 4, 2023 in Mexico City, and at right, Claudia Sheinbaum at an event that presented her as her party's presidential nominee on Sept. 6, 2023 in Mexico City. In a country of more than 98 million Catholics, neither Galvez or Sheinbaum has shared specific proposals on abortion. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano, Files)
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Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
FILE - Demonstrators march during a protest seeking justice over the death of magistrate Ociel Baena, the first openly nonbinary person in Latin America to hold a judicial position, in Mexico City, Nov. 13, 2023. Baena was found dead with their partner at home in the central Mexican city of Aguascalientes after receiving death threats because of gender identity, authorities said. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)
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Mexico Election Abortion Explainer
FILE - A woman holds a banner reading in Spanish, "Legal, safe, and free abortion" as abortion rights protesters demonstrate in front of the National Congress on the "Day for Decriminalization of Abortion in Latin America and the Caribbean," in Mexico City, Sept. 28, 2020. Mexico’s Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that national laws prohibiting abortions are unconstitutional and violate women’s rights. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)
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FILE - A green scarf with a message that reads in Spanish: "To decide is sacred, just and necessary" adorns an altar to Our Lady of Guadalupe, in the office of the Catholics for the Right to Decide, in Mexico City, Dec. 4, 2023. Members of the organization denounce the invisibility of women in some religious environments and advocate for the reinterpretation of sacred texts with a feminist perspective. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File)