' + activeFrame.title + '
');
$(".fotorama-caption").addClass("add_caption");
$(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("remove_caption");
} else {
// alert("hide div");
$(".fotorama-caption").addClass("remove_caption");
$(".fotorama-caption").removeClass("add_caption");
}
})
.fotorama();
Supreme Court throws abortion fight into centre of midterms
Wednesday, May 19, 2021
WASHINGTON, DC, United States (AP) — In agreeing to hear a potentially groundbreaking abortion case, the Supreme Court has energised activists on both sides of the long-running debate who are now girding to make abortion access a major issue in next year's midterm elections.
For many evangelicals, the case could serve as a validation of more than four decades of persistent work and a sometimes awkward relationship with former President Donald Trump, whose three Supreme Court appointments sealed a 6-3 conservative majority. If those justices unite to uphold a Mississippi law banning abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, it would mark a first step toward the possible demise of the 1973 Roe v Wade decision, which established a nationwide right to abortion at any point before a foetus can survive outside the womb, roughly 24 weeks.