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How to watch every Los Angeles Lakers NBA game this season

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 LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers in the second half at Crypto.com Arena on February 08, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Ronald Martinez/Getty Images


Los Angeles Lakers fans are nothing if not dedicated, but figuring how and when to watch each Lakers game on TV or a mobile device can prove trickier than decoding Darvin Ham’s playbook. The Lakers are currently sitting well within playoff contention, which means fans aren’t going to want to miss a single game as the season heats up.

We took the guesswork out of being a Lakers fan and found the best sports streaming platforms to give you the most access to the most Lakers games this season, including today’s game against the Golden State Warriors.


Does every Los Angeles Lakers game air nationally?

Nationally televised NBA games can be seen on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, TNT, TBS and NBATV. But not every NBA game gets a national broadcast.

The Los Angeles Lakers have one of the most dedicated fan bases in the league. They also have a roster of A-list talent, on the court and in the stands, which means the Lakers get VIP treatment when it comes to the league doling out those nationally televised games.

For the 2023-2024 NBA season, the Golden State Warriors have the most nationally televised games with 29, followed by the Los Angeles Lakers who have 28 games televised nationally this season. The Boston Celtics have 26 games televised nationally and the Phoenix Suns follow with 25. That makes sense considering each team’s star power and strong fan base.


What you need to know about watching every Lakers game

Each NBA team has a local affiliate which airs its games for the local market. That’s where the detective works comes in. If you’re a Los Angeles Lakers fan living out of the Southern California television market, for example, you won’t be able watch the Lakers play with a cable subscription alone unless the game is nationally televised. (You can watch some local games with an HDTV antenna.)


How to watch out-of-market Los Angeles Lakers games

You can’t watch out-of-market Los Angeles Lakers games with just a cable subscription, unless the game is nationally televised. To watch the Lakers play if you’re not in the Southern California area or the Lakers aren’t playing your local NBA franchise, you’ll need a streaming platform or app such as NBA League Pass or Sling TV’s NBA Season Pass.


NBA League Pass: Watch out-of-market NBA games this season

If you want to catch out-of-market Los Angeles Lakers games during the 2024 season, NBA League Pass gives you the most access to the most Lakers games this season.

With the NBA League Pass, you can watch out-of-market Lakers games live and on-demand, plus get round the clock NBA TV coverage. With an upgraded NBA League Pass Premium subscription, you get everything included in NBA League Pass, plus you’ll be able to stream live and on-demand games on up to three different devices at a time and get access to the in-arena stream for the game of your choice.

NBA League Pass is currently priced at $15 per month. NBA League Pass Premium costs $23 per month. NBA League Pass offers a seven-day free trial.

What you need to know about watching the Lakers on NBA League Pass: NBA League Pass has some blackout games, which means certain local games and all nationally broadcast games will be available three hours after the live broadcast. All subscription tiers include access to live radio broadcasts of all NBA games.


Stream national and local Lakers games on Sling TV and get NBA League Pass

If you have don’t have cable TV that includes ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, TNT, TBS and NBATV one of the most cost-effective ways to stream Lakers games this year, and still get access to local programming, is through a subscription to Sling TV. The streamer offers access to 46 channels, including TNT and ESPN, plus local ABC affiliates (where available) with its Orange + Blue Tier plan. But what really sets Sling TV apart is its NBA Season Pass offering, that give you special access to watch every out-of-market NBA game live.

Sling TV has a special NBA Prepay Bundle offer for those interested in NBA League Pass: You can prepay for three months of the NBA League Pass basketball streaming service, and get all the channels in the Orange tier, for $135. That works out to $45 per month. (One month of Orange + NBA League Pass regularly costs $55, so this combo plan is the best value.)

NBA League Pass is available as a $15 per month a la carte offering, though you’ll pay just $10 for your first month. You can learn more by tapping the button below.

You can learn more by tapping the button below.

Top features of Sling TV Orange + NBA League Pass:

  • There are 46 channels to watch in total, including local NBC, Fox and ABC affiliates (where available).
  • You get access to most local NBA and nationally broadcast games at the lowest price.
  • All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage, perfect for recording all the biggest games of the season.
  • With Sling TV Orange + NBA League Pass, you’ll get access to all the NBA games you want to watch (minus local blackout games), plus network programs airing on NBC, ABC, Fox and more. It’s the most cost-effective way to watch out-of-market NBA games and local network programming.

Watch the Los Angeles Lakers live this season on Fubo

You can catch the NBA 2024 season live on FuboTV. Fubo is a sports-centric streaming service that offers access to local and nationally aired NBA games, not to mention almost every NFL game next season. Packages include your local ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox affiliates, TNT, ESPN, NBC, the NFL Network and more, so you’ll be able to watch more than just the 2024 NBA season, all without a cable subscription.

To watch the 2024 NBA season without cable, start a seven-day free trial of Fubo. You can begin watching immediately on your TV, phone, tablet or computer. In addition to NBA games, offers college football, NFL, NCAA March Madness, MLB, NHL, MLS and international soccer games. Fubo’s Pro Tier is priced at $80 per month after your free seven-day trial.

Top features of FuboTV Pro Tier:

  • There are no contracts with Fubo — you can cancel at any time.
  • You can watch sporting events up to 72 hours after they air with Fubo Lookback.
  • The Pro tier includes 186 channels, including NFL Network. (You’ll need to upgrade to Ultimate for NFL RedZone.)
  • Fubo includes all the channels you’ll need to watch college and pro football, including CBS (not available through Sling TV).
  • All tiers come with 1,000 hours of cloud-based DVR recording.
  • Stream on your TV, phone, tablet and other devices.

Watch local and national Los Angeles Lakers games on Hulu + Live TV

You can watch the Lakers with Hulu + Live TV. The bundle features access to 90 channels, including both TNT and ABC, so you’ll be able to catch nationally televised NBA games and your local games, while still being able to watch local network programming. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch every local and nationally televised NBA game on every network this season with Hulu + Live TV, plus catch NFL games next season.

Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+. It’s priced at $77.


What is the NBA app?

The NBA app is a terrific companion for die hard Lakers fans who want to stay up to date on the latest scores. You’ll be able to download the NBA app on your phone or mobile device and get the latest news, stories and highlights of what’s happening in the league now. You can find the NBA app on Google Play and the Apple App Store.


Can I watch the NBA on ESPN+?

Unfortunately, you won’t be able to watch the 2024 NBA season with the ESPN+ app. ESPN+ does not include access to the ESPN network. It is a separate sports-centric service, with separate sports programming.


How to get tickets to a Los Angeles Lakers game

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Adam Sandler, Jackie Sandler and Sadie Sandler attend a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Denver Nuggets at Crypto.com Arena on February 08, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. 

Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images


If you want to get one seat closer to LeBron, Anthony Davis, D’Angelo Russell and Spencer Dinwiddie than your streaming app can take you, seeing the team play in person is a dream of every Lakers fan. At home, the Lakers play at Crypto Arena (formerly Staples Center) in downtown Los Angeles. Whether you want to see the Lakers play in Los Angeles or on the road, you can score tickets to a Los Angeles Lakers game through Ticketmaster.


Los Angeles Lakers 2024 regular season game schedule

Below is a complete list of the remaining games of the Los Angeles Lakers 2024 regular season. All times Eastern.

Week 18 (Feb. 19 – 25, 2024)

  • Thursday, Feb. 22: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Golden State Warriors, 10:00 p.m. (TNT)
  • Friday, Feb. 23: San Antonio Spurs vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m. 
  • Sunday, Feb. 25: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Phoenix Suns, 3:30 p.m. (ABC)

Week 19 (Feb. 26 – March 3)

  • Wednesday, Feb. 28: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Los Angeles Clippers, 10:00 p.m.
  • Thursday, Feb. 29: Washington Wizards vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m. 
  • Saturday, March 2: Denver Nuggets vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 8:30 p.m. (ABC)

Week 20 (March 4 – 10)

  • Monday, March 4: Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m
  • Wednesday, March 6: Sacramento Kings vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
  • Friday, March 8: Milwaukee Bucks vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:00 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 10: Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 9:30 p.m.

Week 21 (March 11 – 17)

  • Wednesday, March 13: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Sacramento Kings, 10:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, March 16: Golden State Warriors vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 8:30 p.m. (ABC)

Week 22 (March 18 – 24)

  • Monday, March 18: Atlanta Hawks vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 24: Indiana Pacers vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:00 p.m. 

Week 23 (March 25 – 31)

  • Tuesday, March 26: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Milwaukee Bucks, 7:30 p.m.
  • Wednesday, March 27: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Memphis Grizzlies, 8:00 p.m.
  • Friday, March 29: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Indiana Pacers, 7:00 p.m.
  • Sunday, March 31: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Brooklyn Nets, 6:00 p.m.

Week 24 (April 1 – 7)

  • Tuesday, April 2: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Toronto Raptors, 7:00 p.m.
  • Wednesday, April 3: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Washington Wizards, 7:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, April 6: Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 3:30 p.m.
  • Sunday, April 7: Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:00 p.m.

Week 25 (April 8 – 14)

  • Tuesday, April 9: Golden State Warriors vs. Los Angeles Lakers, 10:00 p.m. (TNT)
  • Friday, April 12: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Memphis Grizzlies, 8:00 p.m.
  • Sunday, April 14: Los Angeles Lakers vs. New Orleans Pelicans, 3:30 p.m.

Key dates for the 2023-2024 NBA season

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Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs handles the ball during the game against the Miami Heat on February 7, 2024 at Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida. 

Issac Baldizon/NBAE via Getty Images


Here are all the important dates for basketball fans to remember, leading up to the NBA Finals in June.

  • Feb. 16-18, 2024: NBA All-Star 2024 game (Indianapolis, IN)
  • Feb. 16-21: NBA All-Star break
  • March 1: Playoff Eligibility Waiver Deadline
  • March 30: NBA G League Regular Season ends
  • April 2: NBA G League Playoffs begin
  • April 14: NBA Regular Season ends
  • April 15: NBA Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2024 (3 p.m. ET)
  • April 16-19: NBA Play-In Tournament
  • April 20: NBA 2024 Playoffs begin
  • April 28: NBA Early Entry Eligibility Deadline (11:59 p.m. ET)
  • May 6-7: Conference Semifinals begin (may move up to May 4-5)
  • May 12: NBA Draft Lottery presented by State Farm (Chicago, IL)
  • May 13-17: NBA Combine (Chicago, IL)
  • May 21-22: Conference Finals begin (may move up to May 19-20)
  • June 6: NBA Finals 2024 Game 1
  • June 9: NBA Finals 2024 Game 2
  • June 12: NBA Finals 2024 Game 3
  • June 14: NBA Finals 2024 Game 4
  • June 17: NBA Draft Early Entry Entrant Withdrawal Deadline (5 p.m. ET)
  • June 17: NBA Finals 2024 Game 5 (if necessary)
  • June 20: NBA Finals 2024 Game 6 (if necessary)
  • June 23: NBA Finals 2024 Game 7 (if necessary)
  • June 26: NBA Draft 2024 presented by State Farm (First Round)
  • June 27: NBA Draft 2024 presented by State Farm (Second Round)
  • July 12-22: NBA 2K Vegas Summer League (Las Vegas)



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Arthur Frommer, famed travel guide innovator, has died at 95

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New York —  Arthur Frommer, whose “Europe on 5 Dollars a Day” guidebooks revolutionized leisure travel by persuading average Americans to take budget vacations abroad, has died. He was 95.

Frommer died from complications of pneumonia, his daughter Pauline Frommer said Monday.

“My father opened up the world to so many people,” she said. “He believed deeply that travel could be an enlightening activity and one that did not require a big budget.”

'Guidebook pope' Arthur Frommer
Guidebook author and publisher Arthur Frommer holds up his publishing company’s latest book, “Arthur Frommer’s Europe,” in New York in November 2015. 

Chris Melzer / picture alliance via Getty Images


Frommer began writing about travel while serving in the U.S. Army in Europe in the 1950s. When a guidebook he wrote for American soldiers overseas sold out, he launched what became one of the travel industry’s best-known brands, self-publishing “Europe on 5 Dollars a Day” in 1957.

“It struck a chord and became an immediate best-seller,” he recalled in an interview with The Associated Press in 2007, on the 50th anniversary of the book’s debut.

The Frommer’s brand, led today by Pauline Frommer, remains one of the best-known names in the travel industry, with guidebooks to destinations around the world, an influential social media presence, podcasts and a radio show.

Frommer’s philosophy – stay in inns and budget hotels instead of five-star hotels, sightsee on your own using public transportation, eat with locals in small cafes instead of fancy restaurants – changed the way Americans traveled in the mid- to late 20th century. He said budget travel was preferable to luxury travel “because it leads to a more authentic experience.” That message encouraged average people, not just the wealthy, to vacation abroad.

It didn’t hurt that his books hit the market as the rise of jet travel made getting to Europe easier than crossing the Atlantic by ship.

The books became so popular that there was a time when you couldn’t visit a place like the Eiffel Tower without spotting Frommer’s guidebooks in the hands of every other American tourist.

Obit Arthur Frommer
Arthur Frommer, 83 at the time, and daughter Pauline Frommer, 46, pose among tourists in the Wall Street area in New York in May 2012.

Seth Wenig / AP


Frommer’s advice also became so standard that it’s hard to remember how radical it seemed in the days before discount flights and backpacks.

“It was really pioneering stuff,” Tony Wheeler, founder of the Lonely Planet guidebook company, said in an interview in 2013. Before Frommer, Wheeler said, you could find guidebooks “that would tell you everything about the church or the temple ruin. But the idea that you wanted to eat somewhere and find a hotel or get from A to B — well, I’ve got a huge amount of respect for Arthur.”

“Arthur did for travel what Consumer Reports did for everything else,” said Pat Carrier, former owner of The Globe Corner, a travel bookstore in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The final editions of Frommer’s groundbreaking series were titled “Europe from $95 a Day.”

Frommer guides reborn

The concept no longer made sense when hotels couldn’t be had for less than $100 a night, so the series was discontinued in 2007. But the Frommer publishing empire didn’t disappear, despite a series of sales that started when Frommer sold the guidebook company to Simon & Schuster. It was later acquired by Wiley Publishing, which in turn sold it to Google in 2012. Google quietly shut the guidebooks down, but Arthur Frommer – in a David vs. Goliath triumph – got his brand back from Google. In November 2013 with his daughter Pauline, he relaunched the print series with dozens of new guidebook titles.

“I never dreamed at my age I’d be working this hard,” he told the AP at the time, age 84.

Frommer also remained a well-known figure in 21st century travel, opinionated to the end of his career, speaking out on his blog and radio show.

He hated mega-cruise ships and railed against travel websites where consumers put up their own reviews, saying they were too easily manipulated with phony posts. And he coined the phrase “Trump Slump” in a widely quoted column that predicted a slump in tourism to the U.S. after Donald Trump was elected president the first time.

Depression-era roots

Frommer was born in Lynchburg, Virginia, and grew up during the Great Depression in Jefferson City, Missouri, the child of a Polish father and Austrian mother. “My father had one job after another, one company after another that went bankrupt,” he recalled. The family moved to New York when he was a teenager. He worked as an office boy at Newsweek, went to New York University and was drafted upon graduating from Yale Law School in 1953. Because he spoke French and Russian, he was sent to work in Army intelligence at a U.S. base in Germany, where the Cold War was heating up.

His first glimpse of Europe was from the window of a military transport plane. Whenever he had a weekend leave or a three-day pass, he’d hop a train to Paris or hitch a ride to England on an Air Force flight.

Eventually, he wrote “The GI’s Guide to Traveling in Europe” and, a few weeks before his Army stint was up, he had 5,000 copies printed by a typesetter in a German village. They were priced at 50 cents apiece and distributed by the Army newspaper, Stars & Stripes.

Shortly after he returned to New York to practice law at the firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, he received a cable from Europe. “The book was sold out, would I arrange a reprint?” he said.

Soon after, he spent his month’s vacation from the law firm doing a civilian version of the guide. “In 30 days I went to 15 different cities, getting up at 4 a.m., running up and down the streets, trying to find good cheap hotels and restaurants,” he recalled.

The resulting book, the very first “Europe on 5 Dollars a Day,” was much more than a list. It was written with a wide-eyed wonder that verged on poetry: “Venice is a fantastic dream,” Frommer wrote. “Try to arrive at night when the wonders of the city can steal upon you piecemeal and slow. … Out of the dark, there appear little clusters of candy-striped mooring poles; a gondola approaches with a lighted lantern hung from its prow.”

Frommer eventually gave up law to write the guides full-time.

Daughter Pauline joined him with his first wife, Hope Arthur, on their trips starting in 1965, when she was 4 months old. “They used to joke that the book should be called ‘Europe on Five Diapers a Day,'” Pauline Frommer said.

In the 1960s, when inflation forced Frommer to change the title of the book to “Europe on 5 and 10 Dollars a Day,” he said “it was as if someone had plunged a knife into my head.”

Dispelling false impressions

Asked to summarize the impact of his books in a 2017 Associated Press interview, he said that in the 1950s, “most Americans had been taught that foreign travel was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, especially travel to Europe. They were taught that they were going to a war-torn country where it was risky to stay in any hotel other than a five-star hotel. It was risky to go into anything but a top-notch restaurant. … And I knew that all these warnings were a lot of nonsense.”

He added: “We were pioneers in also suggesting that a different type of American should travel, that you didn’t have to be well-heeled.”

To the end of his life, he said he avoided traveling first class. “I fly economy class and I try to experience the same form of travel, the same experience that the average American and the average citizen of the world encounters,” he said.

As Frommer aged, his daughter Pauline gradually became the force behind the company, promoting the brand, managing the business and even writing some of the content based on her own travels. Her relationship with her father was both tender and respectful, and she summed it up this way in a 2012 email to AP: “It’s wonderful to have a working partner whose mind is a steel trap and who doesn’t just have smarts, but wisdom. His opinions, whether or not you agree with them, come from his social values. He’s a man who puts ethics at the center of his life, and weaves them into everything he does.”

In addition to Pauline, Frommer’s survivors include his second wife, Roberta Brodfeld, and four grandchildren.



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California Gov. Newsom defers clemency decision as incoming LA County district attorney reviews Menendez brothers case

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Gov. Newsom defers clemency decision on Menendez Brothers case


Gov. Newsom defers clemency decision on Menendez Brothers case

00:26

California Gov. Gavin Newsom will defer his decision on the Menendez brothers’ clemency petition to allow for incoming Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman to review the case, his office announced Monday.

“The Governor respects the role of the District Attorney in ensuring justice is served and recognizes that voters have entrusted District Attorney-elect Hochman to carry out this responsibility,” Newsom’s office said in a statement. “The Governor will defer to the DA-elect’s review and analysis of the Menendez case prior to making any clemency decisions.”

Lyle and Erik Menendez have spent roughly 35 years in state prison after they were convicted in their parents’ 1989 murder. Outgoing District Attorney George Gascón sent letters in support of the brothers’ clemency to Newsom after a Netflix show and documentary revived interest in the brothers’ case. 

“I strongly support clemency for Erik and Lyle Menendez, who are currently serving sentences of life without possibility of parole. They have respectively served 34 years and have continued their educations and worked to create new programs to support the rehabilitation of fellow inmates,” Gascón said in a statement before losing his re-election bid. 

In an interview, Hochman said if the case is not resolved by a Nov. 25 habeas petition hearing — when a judge will hear a motion requesting to vacate the first-degree murder convictions — he will review the case to determine whether or not to recommend resentencing.

Hochman, who will be sworn in on Dec. 2, indicated that he would petition the court for additional time to review the cast ahead of the resentencing hearing scheduled for Dec. 11. 

“I wouldn’t engage in delay for delay’s sake because this case is too important to the Menendez brothers,” Hochman said in an interview earlier in November. “It’s too important to the victims’ family members. It’s too important to the public to delay more than necessary to do the review that people should expect from a district attorney.”  

Such an analysis of the case would involve reviewing thousands of pages of prison files and transcripts of the months-long trials as well as speaking with law enforcement, prosecutors, defense counsel and victims’ family members, he added.

“Whatever position I ultimately end up taking, people should expect that I spent a long time thinking about it, analyzing the evidence,” Hochman said. “But my 34 years of criminal justice experience — involving hundreds of cases as a prosecutor and a defense attorney — allow me to work quickly and expeditiously in conducting this type of thorough review because I’ve done it in many, many cases before.”

After being arrested for their parents’ deaths in 1990, the Menendez brothers went through two trials where prosecutors argued that they murdered their parents because of greed. However, the siblings testified that they killed their parents in self-defense. The brothers told the jury about the alleged sexual abuse they said they experienced at the hands of their father during an emotional, highly publicized first trial.

Following closing arguments, the jurors spent roughly four days deliberating but failed to come to a unanimous decision. The judge declared a mistrial after the jury was unable to deliver a decision. 

In the next and final trial, the presiding judge did not allow the defense to submit some evidence connected to the sexual abuse allegations. Prosecutors argued the brothers were lying about the allegations. 

The second jury convicted Erik and Lyle Menendez of first-degree murder in 1995 and sentenced them to life in prison without the possibility of parole.



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Wyoming abortion laws, including ban on pills to end pregnancy, struck down by state judge

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A state judge on Monday struck down Wyoming’s overall ban on abortion and its first-in-the-nation explicit prohibition on the use of medication to end pregnancy in line with voters in yet more states voicing support for abortion rights.

Since 2022, Teton County District Judge Melissa Owens has ruled consistently three times to block the laws while they were disputed in court.

The decision marks another victory for abortion rights advocates after voters in seven states passed measures in support of access.

One Wyoming law that Owens said violated women’s rights under the state constitution bans abortion except to protect a pregnant woman’s life or in cases involving rape and incest. The other made Wyoming the only state to explicitly ban abortion pills, though other states have instituted de facto bans on the medication by broadly prohibiting abortion.

The laws were challenged by four women, including two obstetricians, and two nonprofit organizations. One of the groups, Wellspring Health Access, opened as the state’s first full-service abortion clinic in years in April 2023 following an arson attack in 2022.

“This is a wonderful day for the citizens of Wyoming — and women everywhere who should have control over their own bodies,” Wellspring Health Access President Julie Burkhart said in a statement.

Protests Break Out Across The U.S. As Supreme Court Overturns Roe v. Wade
Abortion rights protesters chant slogans during a gathering to protest the Supreme Court’s decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health case on June 24, 2022 in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

NATALIE BEHRING / Getty Images


The recent elections saw voters in Missouri clear the way to undo one of the nation’s most restrictive abortion bans in a series of victories for abortion rights advocates. Florida, Nebraska and South Dakota, meanwhile, defeated similar constitutional amendments, leaving bans in place.

Abortion rights amendments also passed in Arizona, Colorado, Maryland and Montana. Nevada voters also approved an amendment in support of abortion rights, but they’ll need to pass it again it 2026 for it to take effect. Another that bans discrimination on the basis of “pregnancy outcomes” prevailed in New York.

The abortion landscape underwent a seismic shift in 2022 when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a ruling that ended a nationwide right to abortion and cleared the way for bans to take effect in most Republican-controlled states.

Currently, 13 states are enforcing bans on abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with limited exceptions, and four have bans that kick in at or about six weeks into pregnancy — often before women realize they’re pregnant.

Nearly every ban has been challenged with a lawsuit. Courts have blocked enforcement of some restrictions, including bans throughout pregnancy in Utah and Wyoming. Judges struck down bans in Georgia and North Dakota in September 2024. Georgia’s Supreme Court ruled the next month that the ban there can be enforced while it considers the case.

In the Wyoming case, the women and nonprofits who challenged the laws argued that the bans stood to harm their health, well-being and livelihoods, claims disputed by attorneys for the state. They also argued the bans violated a 2012 state constitutional amendment saying competent Wyoming residents have a right to make their own health care decisions.

As she had done with previous rulings, Owens found merit in both arguments. The abortion bans “will undermine the integrity of the medical profession by hamstringing the ability of physicians to provide evidence-based medicine to their patients,” Owens ruled.

The abortion laws impede the fundamental right of women to make health care decisions for an entire class of people — those who are pregnant — in violation of the constitutional amendment, Owens ruled.

Wyoming voters approved the amendment amid fears of government overreach following approval of the federal Affordable Care Act and its initial requirements for people to have health insurance.

Attorneys for the state argued that health care, under the amendment, didn’t include abortion. Republican Gov. Mark Gordon, whose administration has defended the laws passed in 2022 and 2023, did not immediately return an email message Monday seeking comment.

Both sides wanted Owens to rule on the lawsuit challenging the abortion bans rather than allow it to go to trial in the spring. A three-day bench trial before Owens was previously set, but won’t be necessary with this ruling.



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