Republicans said the bill was far broader in scope than just contraception.
Democrats' contraception bill failed a key procedural vote on Wednesday as Republicans slammed the broad proposal over parental rights and religious liberty implications.
The Senate voted 51-39 against moving forward with the "Right to Contraception Act."
The bill needed to garner 60 votes in order to move forward in the upper chamber.
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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is seated before a Senate Rules and Administration Committee. (Elizabeth Frantz/Pool via AP)
Ahead of the cloture vote, a majority of Republican senators had already signed onto a statement led by Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., attacking the measure as an attempt to "score cheap political points."
"Today every Senator must take a stand: if you agree all Americans deserve access to contraception, then vote yes on the Right to Contraception Act," Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in floor remarks prior to the vote.
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A package of PlanB One-Step, an emergency contraceptive pill, is seen in security packaging at a CVS Pharmacy in Washington, D.C., on July 7, 2022. (Reuters/Sarah Silbiger)
But Republicans claimed that it wasn't quite that simple.
Per the group of GOP lawmakers, the bill "infringes on the parental rights and religious liberties of some Americans and lets the federal government force religious institutions and schools, even public elementary schools, to offer contraception like condoms to little kids."
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Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., led more than 20 other Republicans in a statement condemning the Democratic contraception bill. (Getty Images)
Top pro-life group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America described the measure as "misleading" in a press release, noting the effect its provisions would have on the funding Planned Parenthood is eligible to receive and that which pro-life pregnancy centers are allowed.
"It’s ‘show-vote’ season in the Senate," Senate Pro-Life Caucus Chair Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., said Wednesday.
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Pro-life demonstrators hold signs while marching past the Supreme Court during the 46th annual March for Life in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 18, 2019. (Getty Images)
"This is another example of Democrats bringing forward deeply deceptive legislation to make political points and try to offer cover to vulnerable Democrats," she said.
However, "[t]he devil is in the details," the senator explained. "This bill isn’t about access to contraception. It’s about pouring more taxpayer dollars to abortion purveyors like Planned Parenthood, while further trampling religious freedoms and parental rights."
Julia Johnson is a politics writer for Fox News Digital and Fox Business, leading coverage of the U.S. Senate. She was previously a politics reporter at the Washington Examiner.
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