Eyeing conservative U.S. top court, two
states pass abortion measures
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[November 07, 2018]
By Dan Whitcomb
(Reuters) - Voters in Alabama and West
Virginia on Tuesday passed ballot measures that could pave the way for
new limits or a full ban on abortion in those states if the
conservative-majority U.S. Supreme Court overturns the 1973 ruling that
legalized abortion.
In Oregon, meanwhile, an initiative that would prohibit the use of
taxpayer money to fund abortion except in cases of medical necessity
appeared headed for defeat.
The U.S. Supreme Court, in its landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision,
legalized abortion nationwide, and the justices have reaffirmed a
woman's constitutional right to have an abortion in subsequent rulings
since then.
Abortion opponents hope the addition of President Donald Trump's
appointee Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, replacing a retired
justice who had protected abortion rights and cementing a 5-4
conservative majority, will lead to a dramatic scaling back or outright
reversal of abortion rights recognized under the 1973 ruling.
In Alabama, an amendment to the state's constitution to formally
"recognize and support the sanctity of unborn life and rights of
children, including the right to life" was leading by a margin of 59
percent to 40 percent with 96 percent of precincts counted, according to
the New York Times.
The Republican-backed Amendment 2 does not specifically outlaw or
restrict abortion in Alabama. But Republican state Representative Matt
Fridy has said he wrote the measure with the Supreme Court's
conservative majority in mind.
"We want to make sure that at a state level, if Roe v. Wade is
overturned, that the Alabama Constitution cannot be used as a mechanism
by which to claim that there is a right to abortion," Fridy told Fox
News in an August interview.
In West Virginia, a ballot measure amending the state's constitution to
say that "nothing in this constitution secures or protects a right to
abortion or funding of abortion" was ahead 51 percent to 48 percent with
54 out of 55 precincts reporting.
The Republican-led West Virginia legislature voted in March to put the
initiative on the ballot, with lawmakers saying they wanted to make
clear there was nothing in the state constitution preventing them from
passing abortion-related legislation should the Roe ruling be overturned
or narrowed.
Oregon's Measure 106 would amend the state constitution to bar the use
of public money to fund abortions except in cases of medical necessity
or where mandated by federal law.
"All three of these instances are the latest in a long string of attacks
on access to reproductive healthcare nationally," said Katie Glenn,
Alabama state director for Planned Parenthood Southeast Advocates.
"Amendment 2 in Alabama specifically would pave the way to ban abortion
without exception, regardless of whether the person was a victim of rape
or incest or if their life is at risk."
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The U.S. Supreme Court is seen in Washington, U.S., June 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Erin Schaff/File Photo
A number of Republican-governed states over the years have passed
laws seeking to put restrictions on abortion, some of which have
been invalidated by the courts.
The Supreme Court in 2016 bolstered constitutional protections for
abortion rights when it threw out key parts of a Texas law that
imposed hard-to-meet regulations on abortion facilities and doctors,
finding the measure placed an "undue burden" on a woman's ability to
obtain an abortion in violation of a 1992 high court precedent.
Anthony Kennedy, the retired justice who Kavanaugh replaced, sided
with the court's four liberals in the 2016 ruling.
Overturning Roe would end a constitutional right to abortion,
enabling individual states to set their own policies.
Alabama and West Virginia are among the states that already have
laws on the books imposing certain restrictions on abortion,
according to the Guttmacher Institute. The institute said four
states have laws that would automatically ban abortion if Roe were
to be reversed, seven states have laws that express an intention to
restrict abortion as much as possible in the absence of Roe, and
nine states still have on the books their unenforced, pre-Roe
abortion bans.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Scott Malone and Will Dunham)
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