Missouri secretary of state blocks
'heartbeat' abortion law referendum
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[June 07, 2019]
(Reuters) - A move to authorize a
referendum over Missouri's recently enacted ban on abortions after the
eighth week of pregnancy hit a roadblock on Thursday when the secretary
of state rejected petitions filed by the American Civil Liberties Union
of Missouri and others to get the issue to the ballot.
The rejection of the petitions by Missouri Secretary of State Jay
Ashcroft was immediately challenged by abortion rights advocates, who
sued Ashcroft on Thursday for "trying to deprive Missourians of their
right to weigh in on the abortion question with a vote," said Tony
Rothert, executive director of the ACLU.
Missouri's constitution gives citizens the right to veto a newly enacted
laws by referendum.
The ACLU filed its lawsuit against Ashcroft in Cole County Circuit Court
in Jefferson City, the state capital.
In announcing his decision, Ashcroft said, "there are certain limits to
the people's right to a referendum."
On May 17, the legislature passed the so-called "Heartbeat Bill."
Governor Mike Parson, a Republican, then signed the bill into law,
making Missouri one of eight states that have passed anti-abortion
legislation this year.
Anti-abortion activists say the restrictive abortion laws are designed
to be challenged in court. Eventually, they say, the newly installed
conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court could use one of the
laws to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that established a
woman's right to terminate her pregnancy.
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"This cowardly move by the Secretary of State proves that Missouri's
anti-abortion zealots understand that they're acting against the
wishes of the majority," Rothert said in a statement. "They hope to
short-circuit the people's vote because they know they will lose if
the people get their say."
Ashcroft's announcement came as the state awaits a ruling on whether
Missouri will become the first U.S. state with no abortion clinics.
A legal fight is underway over Missouri's refusal to renew the
license of Reproductive Health Services of Planned Parenthood in St.
Louis, the only clinic in the state that performs abortions.
The license was to expire on Friday, but a judge issued a temporary
order to freeze it until he rules.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Dan Grebler)
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