Case Studies

NWLC EMTALA Coalition

Leading up to oral arguments before the Supreme Court in the case Idaho v. United States and Moyle v. United States, the National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) led a coalition effort by reproductive health, rights, and justice groups to sound the alarm about the case’s nationwide implications for the right to abortion care in emergency situations.

Client
National Women’s Law Center
Issue(s)
  • Reproductive Freedom
Services
  • Advocacy Campaign Strategy
  • Coalition Management
  • Message Research & Development
  • PR & Media Relations
  • Strategic Communications

Challenge

Demystify the legal complexities of the case and what was at stake, particularly to counter harmful misinformation by anti-abortion extremists.

Opportunity

Harness the collective reach and influence of coalition members to disseminate messages and seed narratives in the media and with advocates about what this case means for abortion access

Results

More than 50 major media outlets engaged by the coalition, including reporters from CNN, The Hill, New York Times, POLITICO, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post

Nearly two dozen media outlets attended two virtual press briefings, some of NWLC’s most successful press briefings to date

At least 90 media stories on EMTALA published by reporters the coalition engaged with

More than 560 direct views on coalition messaging toolkits and summary materials by reporters, partner organizations, and Congressional staff

Approach

M+R facilitated weekly coalition meetings to strategize around materials development and press outreach in the lead-up to oral arguments before the Supreme Court. We maintained internal communication with coalition members via weekly email updates that reported on action items, trends in press coverage, ongoing press outreach to reporters, and coordination needs for larger activations, like press briefings.

M+R developed, with input from various stakeholders, a toolkit to ensure coalition members and partners were driving a consistent message. The toolkit outlined key public messages and talking points for the case, namely around EMTALA (Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act), the long-standing federal law underlying the case that guarantees everyone treatment for emergency medical conditions. This messaging was then repurposed into other iterations tailored for Hill staffers and reporters, and anchored all press pitches and external communications.

Virtual press briefings were a key tactic that M+R used to drive reporter engagement. We held two briefings—one ahead of the oral arguments, and a second immediately responding to the oral arguments. These briefings featured a mix of experts, advocates, and directly impacted speakers and were some of NWLC’s most successful press briefings to date, attended by top reporters from outlets including ABC News, Associated Press, BBC, The Hill, Huffington Post, The Intercept, Los Angeles Times, Mother Jones, Ms. Magazine, National Journal, New York Times, NPR, POLITICO, Salon, USA Today, Voice of America, Vox and Wall Street Journal.

M+R also regularly monitored overall sentiment and tone of the conversation around EMTALA and related issues in national and select local media and on social media. We used these observations to identify opportunities to elevate the coalition’s voices and key narratives, and reporters that were engaging on the issue.