Sen. Cory Gardner Cory Scott GardnerJeff Flake: Republicans 'should hold the same position' on SCOTUS vacancy as 2016 Momentum growing among Republicans for Supreme Court vote before Election Day Gardner on court vacancy: Country needs to mourn Ginsburg 'before the politics begin' MORE (R-Colo.) is leading a new push to allow women to buy birth control without a prescription, hoping to deliver on one of the biggest promises of his freshman Senate campaign last year.

A half-dozen Senate Republicans have signed onto Gardner’s bill, which would reward drug companies that sell contraceptives to file an application to sell their products over the counter.

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“Most other drugs with such a long history of safe and routine use are available for purchase over the counter, and contraception should join them,” Gardner wrote in a statement. He said his bill would benefit women in rural and underserved areas, while also saving people money and time by “increasing competition and availability.”

The bill would allow contraception drugs to be given priority review by the Food and Drug Administration to be considered for an over-the-counter switch. The companies would also have their filing fee waived.

The Colorado Republican’s push to make birth control available over-the-counter is not winning him more allies among women’s reproductive health groups, however.

Groups like Planned Parenthood have opposed the idea, which they argue could drive up contraception prices.

The group has pointed to ObamaCare’s contraception mandate — requiring insurance plans to cover all FDA-approved forms of birth control — and said that insurers may no longer cover the medication if it’s not prescribed by a doctor.

Dr. Mark DeFrancesco, president of the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, released a statement condemning Gardner’s bill shortly after he introduced it.

“Their bill does not do much to increase access to contraception — and, in fact, includes details that will take a giant step in the wrong direction,” DeFrancesco wrote.

“We cannot support a plan that creates one route to access at the expense of another, more helpful route,” he said.

Some conservatives, however, have said that the opposition from Planned Parenthood and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists is actually money-related. Some have accused the groups of trying to avoid a potential scenario in which fewer women will need their services to get a prescription.

Gardner, who narrowly won his Senate race last fall, made over-the-counter contraception a key piece of his campaign against then-Sen. Mark Udall Mark Emery UdallThe 10 Senate seats most likely to flip Democratic presidential race comes into sharp focus Democrats will win back the Senate majority in 2020, all thanks to President Trump MORE (D-Colo.).

Udall — who attacked his opponent so often on women’s issues that he earned the nickname, “Mark Uterus” — repeatedly accused Gardner of trying to ban access to contraception and abortions.

Weeks after Gardner was hit with his first critical ad on women’s issues, the Senate hopeful penned an op-ed in which he pledged to make birth control available without a doctor’s note.

- This post was updated Monday, June 1 at 9:14 a.m.