Current:Home > reviewsWNBA commissioner sidesteps question on All-Star Game in Arizona - an anti-abortion state -OceanicInvest
WNBA commissioner sidesteps question on All-Star Game in Arizona - an anti-abortion state
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:39:46
For a league so outspoken about women’s rights, it might surprise people to learn that the WNBA will hold the 2024 All-Star Game in Phoenix.
Just last week, the Arizona Supreme Court voted to enforce a near-total abortion ban that dates to 1864, a decision that does not reflect the values of one of the nation's most progressive professional sports leagues.
WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert did not answer a question about if the league discussed moving the 2024 All-Star Game during her pre-draft remarks to media Monday night. The game is scheduled for July 20 and was announced in March.
The law — which was written before Arizona was part of the United States — is part of the continued ripple effect of the Dobbs decision, the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned the constitutional right to an abortion. That ruling put the fate of reproductive rights back in the hands of individual states. In the nearly two years since the ruling, numerous states have issued total or near-total abortion bans, with some states going so far as to prosecute women who get abortions and the people, including doctors, who help them obtain one.
Throughout it all, WNBA players — as well as numerous other professional athletes, male and female — have been outspoken about their support for women’s reproductive rights.
And that will continue according to Engelbert, even if a major league event is being held in a state with a draconian law.
“One thing I like about our players is our players want to be engaged, they don’t run away from things, they want to be engaged and want to force change in the communities in which they live and work, and they do it very effectively,” Engelbert said Monday during her pre-draft chat with reporters. “Obviously we have a team there (in Arizona) as well, and they’ll continue to make their impact on this particular issue, maternal health and reproductive rights.”
MORE:Caitlin Clark, Kamilla Cardoso, WNBA draft prospects visit Empire State Building
MORE:Serena Williams says she'd 'be super-interested' in owning a WNBA team
In 2017, the NBA moved its All-Star game from Charlotte, North Carolina, to New Orleans after a so-called “bathroom bill” barred transgender people from using the bathroom that matched their gender identity.
But since that All-Star game the NBA has held events in other states unfriendly to both women’s rights and LGBTQ rights (the 2023 All-Star game was in Utah, for example), reasoning that they can’t constantly move things because the next state could have an equally bad bill on the books; All-Star games are typically scheduled a year in advance. Additionally, moving a major event out of state won’t necessarily force or encourage lawmakers to vote the opposite way.
The WNBA isn’t the only women’s pro league holding major events and keeping teams in red states, either: The NWSL plays in Texas and Florida, and numerous NCAA women’s championship events are scheduled for red states in the coming years, too.
Abortion rights groups have said abandoning states with these laws doesn’t help because the laws don’t necessarily reflect the people who live there.
“I’ve heard time and time again from reproductive rights workers that they don’t want folks to pull out from their states. They don’t want to be in isolation,” said Heather Shumaker, director of State Abortion Access for the National Women’s Law Center.
“Using any opportunity to be vocal about the importance of abortion access” helps, Shumaker told USA TODAY Sports last year. “Use your platform, whether that’s social media, wearing a wristband or armband — whatever tool is in your toolbox, use that to uplift attention on abortion access.”
Engelbert said that’s exactly what WNBA players intend to do.
“Our players won’t run away from it,” she said. “They’ll want to help effect change and use our platform and their platform to do just that.”
Nancy Armour reported from New York.
veryGood! (416)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Coal miners plead with feds for stronger enforcement during emotional hearing on black lung rule
- Kenosha police arrested a Black man at Applebee’s. The actual suspects were in the bathroom
- Bruce Springsteen honors Robbie Robertson of The Band at Chicago show
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Texas judge says no quick ruling expected over GOP efforts to toss 2022 election losses near Houston
- Threat of scaffolding collapse shuts down part of downtown Orlando, Florida
- Mason Crosby is kicking from boat, everywhere else to remind NFL teams he still has it
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- LGBTQ+ people in Ethiopia blame attacks on their community on inciteful and lingering TikTok videos
Ranking
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Jason Momoa 'devastated' by Maui wildfires; Oprah Winfrey hands out supplies
- Poland to send 10,000 soldiers to Belarus border as tension rises amid Russia's war in Ukraine
- LGBTQ+ people in Ethiopia blame attacks on their community on inciteful and lingering TikTok videos
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Da'vian Kimbrough, 13, becomes youngest pro soccer player in U.S. after signing with the Sacramento Republic
- Trading Titan: The Rise of Mark Williams in the Financial World
- Target recalls more than 2 million scented candles after reports of glass shattering during use
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
4th person charged in riverside brawl in Alabama that drew national attention
Statewide preschool initiative gets permanent approval as it enters 25th year in South Carolina
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos buys home in Miami’s ‘billionaire bunker.’ Tom Brady will be his neighbor
'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
Lil Tay says she’s alive, claims her social media was hacked: Everything we know
Adam Sandler's Daughters Sadie and Sunny Are All Grown Up in Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah Trailer
Target recalls more than 2 million scented candles after reports of glass shattering during use