• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
N4C Logo

Neighbors For Change

  • News
  • Events
  • N4C Spotlight
  • Data Centers
  • Resources
    • Take Action
    • About
    • Contact
  • Newsletter

All Kinds of Virginia Women Support Reproductive Healthcare

August 11, 2025
By: Heather Massey

A Virginia Mercury article revealed shifting sentiments about reproductive healthcare among Virginian voters. Reproductive healthcare access is also an area of common ground for different kinds of Virginia women and has a significant role in the 2025 Virginia governor’s race, with some women saying that this issue is “reshaping how they plan to vote this fall.”

Sexual health services such as in-vitro fertilization (IVF) have such broad support among women that some are willing to cross party lines to elect gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger to preserve their access to it. Spanberger “has pledged to support Virginians’ access to reproductive health services, including abortion, in vitro fertilization and contraception.”

In contrast, Republican gubernatorial nominee Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears opposed Virginia’s constitutional amendment for reproductive rights this past spring and has “participated in anti-abortion demonstrations this year.”

Voters unite with an open letter

According to the Virginia Mercury article, voters of all kinds feel so strongly about access to reproductive healthcare that 450 signed an open letter (via the Democratic Party of Virginia) to Earle-Sears. The signers informed her that “she didn’t have their vote because they ‘can’t trust’ her to protect reproductive health” and pledged to support Spanberger.

The article also describes how some female voters are willing to vote in a bipartisan way to preserve their right to build their families when and how they want. They also support medical interventions to safely manage miscarriages as well as abortion healthcare in cases of pregnancy that results from sexual assault. And Virginia Democrats hope that the Constitutional Amendment for Reproductive Freedom “can resonate beyond party lines in the commonwealth.”

According to the article, Mauricia Smith, who has voted for politicians of various parties, shared that “sometimes certain issues transcend partisanship” and “she hopes voters won’t choose their next governor or state delegate based solely on party affiliation, but instead make their decisions based on the issues that matter most to them.”

Take Action

  • Help elect VA General Assembly delegates and state senators who support the Constitutional Amendment for Reproductive Freedom so it can get on the ballot. In HD57, that’s May Nivar!
  • Share this article with a friend!

Learn More

  • Read “More access, less cost: Spanberger lays out health care plans if she wins Virginia governorship”

Related Posts

  • 9/6/25 - Virginia's Healthcare is Under Attack

  • Abigail Spanberger addressing an audience.
    Spanberger Plan for Growing Virginia

    Spanberger stood alongside union workers, business leaders, educators, and local elected officials as she outlined…

  • Watch the Virginia Lt. Governor Democratic Debate!

    On May 22nd, WJLA 7 in partnership with the Northern Virginia Black Democratic Caucus hosted…

  • Virginia General Assembly - Focus on HJ9

    All three of the proposed amendments are important, but we’re highlighting HJ9 because Virginia’s constitution…

About the Author

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Neighbor Spotlight

“I want a better society for my kids. I’m passionate about healthcare. I’m a physician, my wife is in public health and the way healthcare is going right now is very frightening and I just want a candidate who is willing to go against what is happening on the national level. The vaccination piece is definitely scary, I think it’s really important to stay up to date with those things, the pandemic changed so much about how people trust the healthcare system, and while there are a lot of ways the healthcare system needs to improve, leadership from the top down needs to be solid and it’s just not solid right now”.

“I’m mostly concerned about the SNAP funding. Because in my profession, I know some people through Virginia Cooperative Extension who were doing nutrition education for SNAP beneficiaries, all of those programs were cut as kind of a ripple effect from the (Big, Beautiful) bill, but they lost those programs, which is important to me – nutrition information. I’m concerned about out healthcare, I’m concerned about what’s happening with immigration right now and for me personally, I’m soon going on Medicare, and I’m concerned with what’s happening with that. Things are so divisive, you can’t even really talk about issues in a calm way”.

Stephanie

“I am passionate about gun safety regulation. I am passionate about enforcement of the anti-trust laws. Those are two big ones for me. And also intelligent AI regulation and data center/environmental regulations. I have concern about the kind of Wild West style lack of regulation of artificial intelligence. I think we need to take a systematic thoughtful approach so that we targeted AI rather than just an uncontrolled profit for a few big companies”.

View More Neighbor Spotlights

Events

Happy 1st Birthday N4C Invite

3/23/26 – Celebrate at McCormack’s Big Whiskey Grill

“It’s a pub…with a bit of attitude.” Come celebrate N4C's 1st Birthday, enjoy cake, and support a … READ MORE about 3/23/26 – Celebrate at McCormack’s Big Whiskey Grill

Recent News

Joe Manchin, Andrew Yang, Justin Amash

Richmond Forum Considers “The Two-Party Problem”

Body: The Richmond Forum is the nation’s largest nonprofit speaker series, bringing the world’s most … READ MORE about Richmond Forum Considers “The Two-Party Problem”

Henrico Dems Cigs event recap polly

Strong Turnout for Henrico Dems ‘Coffee & Sigs’

On 2/21 at the Regency Square Starbucks, Henrico Dems hosted a petition signing event for the … READ MORE about Strong Turnout for Henrico Dems ‘Coffee & Sigs’

AI

AI Impact: Jobs and the Economy

As described in our previous article, A Brief History of Artificial Intelligence, AI has infiltrated … READ MORE about AI Impact: Jobs and the Economy

© 2026 NEIGHBORS FOR CHANGE
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  • Home
  • Take Action
  • News
  • N4C Spotlight
  • Events
  • Resources
  • About
  • Contact