Hillary Clinton tries to one-up Barack Obama and John Edwards today by releasing not only a statement on the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, but a full "agenda for women's reproductive health care." Broadly speaking, it covers the same issues of access to abortion and contraception that all three front-runners agree upon. But the language really gets into the weeds on restoring Title X family planning funding, repealing parts of the Deficit Reduction Act that made birth control more expensive for poor women and college students, and requiring all hospitals to offer rape victims emergency contraception. There's no "re-framing" here, something Clinton was (in)famous for doing in the past, with her "abortion is a tragedy" statement of 2005. Like Obama, Clinton has detailed plans on childcare and family sick leave. But unlike her opponent, she isn't explicitly linking that platform to her support for access to abortion and contraception. In her plan, Clinton mentions three important reproductive health care issues that didn't make it into Obama or Edwards' statements today: The need for comprehensive sexuality education in American schools; the disastrous effects of the Bush administration's Global Gag Rule, which prevents U.S. foreign aid from supporting family planning programs that even mention abortion or contraception; and the need for better reproductive health care services for women stationed at American military bases, including access to Plan B. In 2006, there were 3,000 reports of sexual assault against women in our military. --Dana Goldstein