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HomeWORLDTOP NEWSNew Poll: Majority of Adults Favor Legal Abortion Three Years Post-Roe Overturn

New Poll: Majority of Adults Favor Legal Abortion Three Years Post-Roe Overturn


Most US adults support legal abortion three years after Roe overturn, new poll finds

Good morning, and welcome to the US politics blog.

Today we’re kicking off with the findings of a new poll: three years after the US supreme court opened the door to state abortion bans, most adults continue to say abortion should be legal — views that look similar to before the landmark ruling.

The new findings from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll show that about two-thirds of US adults think abortion should be legal in all or most cases.

About half believe abortion should be available in their state if someone does not want to be pregnant for any reason. That level of support for abortion is down slightly from what an AP-NORC poll showed last year, when it seemed that support for legal abortion might be rising.

Other things to note in US politics today:

Stick with us today as we bring you all the US politics news to come.

Key events

Trump visit to Scotland expected to be met with wave of protest

Libby Brooks and Peter Walker

Scottish protest organisers anticipate a wave of resistance to Donald Trump from Ayrshire to Aberdeenshire this weekend as Scots take to the streets to express “widespread anger” at what they termed the US president’s increasingly extreme policies.

Trump t is expected to arrive in Scotland tomorrow for a five-day private visit to his luxury golf resorts at Turnberry in Ayrshire and Menie in Aberdeenshire.

While it is not a formal trip, Keir Starmer will hold talks in Scotland with Trump on Monday. No press conference is scheduled, but the media (not the Wall Street Journal) are expected to attend the start of the discussions.

The Stop Trump Coalition is organising events in Aberdeen in the city centre and outside the US consulate in Edinburgh on Saturday at midday – similar gatherings during Trump’s visit to Scotland in 2018 attracted thousands of protesters.

Along with the two main city gatherings, protests are expected around Turnberry and Menie, where Trump is expected to open a new 18-hole golf course named in honour of his mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump, who was born on the Isle of Lewis.

Demonstrators in Edinburgh protest against Donald Trump’s visit to the UK on 14 July 2018. Photograph: Lesley Martin/PA
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