With less than three weeks to the mid-term elections, Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney, NY-D, released a report card on Wednesday at New York's City Hall showing the hostility towards women's health in the Republican-led House over the last four years.

"The Republican-controlled House has passed 13 different measures to chip away at women's rights to choose, but fortunately the Senate was able to block those measure from moving forward," said Congresswoman Maloney.

The bills are incredible. Votes in the 113 Congress - HR 1797 would ban abortion after 20 weeks nationwide and make no exception in the case of rape or incest, and threaten physicians with a five year prison sentence for violating the ban. Resolution 59 amendment would allow any employer or health plan sponsor or insurance plan to refuse to cover women's preventative health service for virtually any reason. HR 7 would prohibit expenditure of funds by federal law for any abortion or health benefits coverage that includes coverage of abortion.

The 112 Congress passed a bill, HR1, defunding Planned Parenthood and its affiliates while eliminating funding for the United Nations Population Fund. The proposal would deny basic, preventative health-care services. HR3 would ban abortion coverage in state health insurance. The bill was in its final passage and would spur the IRS to audit sexual assault survivors who seek abortion care. HR 1216 amendment would prohibit federal funds from being used by teaching health centers for training in abortion care.

Bill HR 358 would effectively ban abortion coverage in state health-insurance exchanges and the bill would allow hospitals to refuse to provide emergency abortion care, even when a woman's life is in danger, and undermine coverage of human related services such as contraception. The bill passed 251-172.

According to Maloney, only one single vote was taken on a measure to protect reproductive freedom -- a procedural vote sponsored by Rep. Lois Capps to fix a provision that allows hospitals to refuse to provide emergency abortion care, even when a woman's life is in danger. The measure was defeated.

Joining Congresswoman Maloney on Wednesday was Sarah Weddington, the attorney who argued Roe v. Wade before the Supreme Court; Sonia Ossorio, President of the National Organization for Women NYC; and Emily Kadar, Government and Advocacy Manager, NARAL Pro-Choice NY, among others who urged women and like-minded men across the country need to hold the line against the torrent of anti-choice politicians running for office this year.

"After the decision in Roe v. Wade, I thought a woman's rights to obtain an abortion was secure throughout the nation. It is horrifying to see the number of ways in which Congress and state legislatures are succeeding in eroding women's reproductive rights, to the point where some states may soon have no facilities where women can obtain a legal abortion," said Sarah Weddington, attorney.

Congresswoman Maloney says she is also concerned about the steps the Supreme Court has taken in its recent ruling to roll back protections for women's health care -- for example, the recent ruling in the Hobby Lobby case.

"If more anti-choice Republicans are elected to the House and Democrats fail to keep the Senate, the result could be more of these anti-choice bills landing on the President's desk and a more conservative Supreme Court that doesn't share our values."

It is the Senate that gets to select justices for the Supreme Court.