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In this Aug. 21, 2018, file photo, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, speaks with Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh at her office, before a private meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP)
Democrat Graham Platner, Sen. Susan Collins' rival in the Maine race, has sought to link Collins to President Donald Trump, who nominated Brett Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court in 2018.
Collins said she doesn’t regret voting to confirm Kavanaugh, even though she disagrees with the court’s 2022 ruling to overturn the federal right to abortion access. Kavanaugh joined the majority in the ruling.
In response to the court’s ruling, Maine’s state lawmakers passed several laws to expand abortion rights and protect patients and providers.
U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she doesn’t regret voting to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, even though he became essential to the court’s majority ruling that overturned the federal right to abortion.
"Obviously, I'm disappointed in that decision, which turned abortion issues back to the states," Collins said June 12. "It has not had an impact on the state of Maine in that Maine actually expanded its law."
Seeking to tie Collins to President Donald Trump, Senate race challenger Democrat Graham Platner has criticized Collins’ 2018 pro-Kavanaugh vote as evidence she’s not bipartisan. Trump nominated Kavanaugh during his first term. Planned Parenthood Action Fund also cited Collins’ support of Kavanaugh in its June 22 endorsement of Platner.
Collins, who supported Roe v. Wade, usually votes in support of Trump but has taken some high-profile positions against the president.
Collins is correct that Maine expanded its laws in support of abortion, but critics say that took work. In response to the ruling, Maine’s state lawmakers and Democratic Gov. Janet Mills scrambled to protect abortion access and spent years strengthening its laws. The Trump administration and Maine are at odds over abortion care.
In 2022’s Dobbs v. Jackson ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Mississippi law that banned abortion after 15 weeks, with the majority opinion saying, "the Constitution makes no express reference to a right to obtain an abortion." The decision reversed Roe v. Wade, ending nearly 50 years of federally protected access to abortion and returned power to states to set their own laws.
Mills and Maine lawmakers responded by enacting laws from 2023 to 2025 to protect and expand abortion access.
State law previously said that abortion was legal up to the point of viability, when a fetus can typically survive outside a uterus. In 2023, Maine updated its law to say that abortion could occur after viability if it was deemed necessary by a physician.
"We are affirming that Maine people, guided by their medical professionals, their families, their personal and spiritual beliefs, that they will make decisions about their reproductive health care," Mills said when she signed the bill. "They will do so and not politicians."
Lawmakers passed several other bills that shielded abortion providers from prosecution or discipline, including if they attended patients from other states; prohibited private insurers from imposing certain costs for abortion; let providers not have their names appear on abortion pill bottles; and prevented cities from passing abortion restrictions.
The Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights, considers Maine as "very protective" of abortion rights, one notch below "most protective."
The number of abortions in Maine has remained relatively consistent in recent years before and after the Supreme Court ruling, Guttmacher Institute’s data shows. Clinicians provided 2,370 abortions in Maine in 2020 and 2,390 in 2023, the first full year after the ruling. There were 2,750 abortions in 2025. (Guttmacher said it did not have 2021-22 data.)
Although state lawmakers protected abortion access after the Dobbs ruling, abortion providers said there were still some effects.
"Mainers have worked tirelessly to mitigate the harm caused by Susan Collins’s vote for Justice Kavanaugh," Planned Parenthood Votes said in a statement to PolitiFact.
In 2024, the state house building was evacuated due to a bomb threat as a bill to protect providers and gender-affirming care was moving through the legislature. The threat claimed bombs were placed in some lawmakers’ homes and the Maine Democratic Party. No explosives were found.
There was confusion and fear about the legality of abortion care in Maine right after the Dobbs ruling, said Aspen Ruhlin, community engagement manager at Mabel Wadsworth Center, a reproductive health care provider in Bangor. "We received many panicked calls and emails from people thinking that the SCOTUS ruling that struck down Roe made abortion illegal in all states."
Collins' remarks were specifically about Maine, but the Supreme Court’s ruling overturning Roe v. Wade had broad effects: By late 2025, 23 states enacted near-total bans or strict limits at 22 weeks gestation or less.
Collins said that the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling on abortion "has not had an impact on the state of Maine in that Maine actually expanded its law."
If we interpret Collins’ statement as referring to abortion care access, she is correct. Following the ruling, state lawmakers passed several laws to protect patients and providers and said abortion could occur after viability if deemed necessary by a physician.
Abortion providers pointed to other effects, such as a bomb threat at the capitol while lawmakers were considering an abortion-related bill, and fear and confusion among the public immediately after the ruling.
We rate this statement Mostly True.
RELATED: All of our fact-checks in the 2026 Midterms including Maine
NewsCenterMaine, 'I do not regret that vote' | Sen. Collins again defends her vote to confirm Justice Brett Kavanaugh, June 16, 2026
The New York Times, Susan Collins Laments Roe’s Fall but Doesn’t ‘Regret’ Confirming Kavanaugh, June 17, 2026
AdImpact, X post,
Sen. Susan Collins, Senator Collins' statement on SCOTUS Dobbs decision, June 24, 2022
WMTW, Maine among 13 states being investigated by Trump administration over abortion care mandate, March 23, 2026
WMTW, Maine Governor Janet Mills signs law expanding access to later-in-pregnancy abortions, July 23, 2023
WMTW, Prescriber's names no longer need to be on abortion pill labels, June 3, 2025
WMTW, Hundreds of bills went into effect on Wednesday, Sept. 25, 2025
WMTW, Transgender care, abortion provider shield law becomes law in Maine, April 23, 2024
WMTW, Maine's transgender care shield bill goes national: What to know about LD 227, March 14, 2024
WMTW, Court rules Trump administration can deny Medicaid funding to Maine Family Planning, Aug. 25, 2025
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights, OCR notice of compliance review, March 19, 2026
Maine Legislature, LD 616, 2023
Maine Legislature, LD 1619, 2023
Maine Legislature, LD 935, 2023
Maine Legislature, LD 1343, 2023
BillTrack50, LD 227, 2024
Maine Legislature, LD 143, 2025
Maine Legislature, LD 538, 2025
Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law, Shield law Maine, September 2024
Reproductive Freedom Alliance, LD 616: An act to protect health care professionals providing reproductive health care services, July 17, 2024
Guttmacher Institute, Maine abortion policies, June 12, 2026
Guttmacher Institute, Monthly abortion provision study, 2023-2025
Guttmacher Institute, The High Toll of US Abortion Bans: Nearly One in Five Patients Now Traveling Out of State for Abortion Care December 2023
KFF, Maine abortion data, April 27, 2026
Society of Family Planning, WeCount June 2025 data, June 2025
Center for Reproductive Rights, After Roe Fell: U.S. Abortion laws by state, Accessed June 18, 2026
Office of Gov. Janet Mills, Governor Mills to Protect Maine Reproductive Health Care Providers After Trump & Congress Hammer Them with Budget Cuts, Jan. 27, 2026
National Health Law Program, OBBBA’s Medicaid Abortion Provider "Defund": An Overview, Aug. 11, 2025
KFF, An Update on Medicaid, Title X and Planned Parenthood, June 8, 2026
Planned Parenthood Maine Action Fund, Reproductive care providers warn of loss of health care access amid state budget fight, federal funding cuts three years after Dobbs ruling, June 25, 2025
Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, One Year Post-Roe, PPNNE Details Impact of Supreme Court Decision to Dismantle Abortion Rights June 16, 2023
Planned Parenthood Action Fund, Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorses Graham Platner for Senate , June 22, 2026
Republican attorneys general, Letter to Gov. Janet Mills and Maine legislative leaders, March 11, 2024
Maine Morning Star, Maine Capitol Police taking proactive security precautions amid tense political climate, March 12, 2024
Morning Sentinel, Legislators, Democratic Party evacuated Friday, but no bomb was found, March 9, 2026
Sen. Susan Collins, Senator Collins Joins Bipartisan Effort to Codify Roe v. Wade, Aug. 1, 2022
American Journal of Public Health, Post-Dobbs Era: Evolving Abortion Care Restrictions and Public Health Impact, Dec. 16, 2025
PolitiFact, What Trump’s Supreme Court nominee has said on abortion, July 10, 2018
PolitiFact, Fact-checking 5 claims about the final Supreme Court ruling on abortion, June 24, 2022
PolitiFact, With Roe gone, what happens next in each state?, June 24, 2022
PolitiFact, Yes, the Trump justices said Roe v. Wade was a precedent in confirmation hearings, May 5, 2022
PolitiFact, Yes, Collins usually votes with Trump, as Platner said. But she broke with him at key moments, June 10, 2026
Email interview, Katie Rodihan, director of state advocacy communications at Planned Parenthood Federation of America, June 17, 2026
Email interview, Lisa Newcomb, spokesperson for Planned Parenthood Maine Action Fund, June 19, 2026
Email interview, Aspen Ruhlin, community engagement manager at Mabel Wadsworth Center, June 22, 2026
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