Mayor Lightfoot said the executive order prohibits all city departments, including Chicago police and the Chicago Department of Public Health, from cooperating with any investigation or proceeding from other states seeking to either criminally or civilly penalize people seeking reproductive care in Chicago.
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"While we cannot stop anti-abortion states from trying to take action in court against providers or patients in Chicago, we can ensure that as a city government, we are never complicit in aiding or abetting those efforts."
Mayor Lightfoot announces abortion executive order
Mayor Lightfoot said the need for abortions in Chicago from outside residents is already on the rise.
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Several aldermen also plan to present an ordinance in City Council, that will be signed into law come September protecting outside visitors seeking abortions in Chicago.
Indiana abortion bill banning nearly all instances of procedure advances, despite opposition
The mayor said the city has already spent $500,000 to expand access to reproductive health.
Dueling rallies clash in downtown Chicago over abortion rights
Peter Breen, vice president and senior counsel for the Thomas More Society, said in a statement, "Instead of focusing so much on aborting out of state babies, Mayor Lightfoot should focus on fixing the problems of violence being faced by Chicagoans every day.''