Abortion is on the ballot in nine states and motivating voters across
the US
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[November 05, 2024]
By GEOFF MULVIHILL and CHRISTINE FERNANDO
WASHINGTON (AP) — Voters in nine states are deciding whether their state
constitutions should guarantee a right to abortion, weighing ballot
measures that are expected to spur turnout for a range of crucial races.
Passing certain amendments in Arizona, Florida, Missouri, Nebraska and
South Dakota likely would lead to undoing bans or restrictions that
currently block varying levels of abortion access to more than 7 million
women of childbearing age who live in those states.
The future legality and availability of abortion hinges not only on
ballot measures, as policies could shift depending on who controls
Congress and the presidency. Same with state governments — including
legislatures that pursue new laws, state supreme courts that determine
the laws' constitutionality, attorneys general who decide whether to
defend them and district attorneys who enforce them.
If all the abortion rights measures pass, "it’s a sign of how much of a
juggernaut support for reproductive rights has become,” said Mary
Ziegler, a professor at the University of California Davis School of Law
and an expert on the history of reproductive rights in the U.S.
“If some of them fail," she added, "then you’re going to see some
conservatives looking for guidance to see what the magic ingredient was
that made it possible for conservatives to stem the tide.”
Voters have been supporting abortion rights
Abortion rights advocates have prevailed on all seven measures that have
appeared since 2022, when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade
and ended the nationwide right to abortion. That decision opened the
door to bans or restrictions in most GOP-controlled states — and
protections of access in most of those controlled by Democrats.
The abortion rights campaigns have a big fundraising advantage this
year. Their opponents' efforts are focused on portraying the amendments
as too extreme rather than abortion as immoral.
Currently, 13 states are enforcing bans at all stages of pregnancy, with
some exceptions. Four more bar abortion in most cases after about six
weeks of pregnancy — before women often realize they’re pregnant.
Despite the bans, the number of monthly abortions in the U.S. has risen
slightly, because of the growing use of abortion pills and organized
efforts to help women travel for abortion. Still, advocates say the bans
have reduced access, especially for lower-income and minority residents
of the states with bans.
The bans also are part of a key argument in the presidential race. Vice
President Kamala Harris calls them “Trump abortion bans,” noting former
President Donald Trump’s role in overturning Roe v. Wade. Harris,
meanwhile, has portrayed herself as a direct, consistent advocate for
reproductive health and rights, including Black maternal health.
Trump has struggled to thread a divide between his own base of
anti-abortion supporters and the majority of Americans who support
abortion rights, leaning on his catch-all response that abortion rights
should be left up to individual states.
His shifting stances on reproductive rights include vowing in October to
veto a national abortion ban, just weeks after the presidential debate
when he repeatedly declined to say. Trump also has regularly taken
credit for appointing three Supreme Court justices who helped overturn
Roe v. Wade.
Trump’s attempt to find a more cautious stance on abortion echoes the
efforts of many Republican congressional candidates as the issue has
emerged as a major vulnerability for the GOP. In competitive
congressional races from coast to coast, Republicans distanced
themselves from more aggressive anti-abortion policies coming from their
party and its allies, despite their records on the issue and previous
statements opposing abortion rights.
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Protesters join thousands marching around the Arizona Capitol in
Phoenix, protesting the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn
Roe v. Wade, June 24, 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, File)
The measures could roll back bans
in five states
While the ballot questions have similar aims, each one occupies its
own political circumstances.
There’s an added obstacle to passing protections in reliably
Republican Florida: Supporters of the amendment must get at least
60% of the vote.
Passing it there and rolling back a 6-week ban that took effect in
May would be a blow to Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican with a
national profile, who has steered state GOP funds to the cause and
whose administration has weighed in, too, with a campaign against
the measure, investigators questioning people who signed petitions
to add it to the ballot and threats to TV stations that aired one
commercial supporting it.
Nebraska has competing ballot measures. One would allow abortion
further into pregnancy. The other would enshrine in the constitution
the state’s current law, which bars most abortions after 12 weeks —
but would allow for further restrictions.
In South Dakota, the measure would allow some regulations related to
the health of the woman after 12 weeks. Because of that wrinkle,
most national abortion-rights groups are not supporting it.
In some states, notably Missouri, passing amendments may not expand
access immediately. Courts would be asked to invalidate the bans;
and there could be legal battles over that. Clinics would need to
staff up and get licenses. And some restrictions could remain in
effect.
Arizona, a battleground in the presidential election, bans abortion
after the first 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The ballot measure there gained momentum after a state Supreme Court
ruling in April found that the state could enforce a strict abortion
ban adopted in 1864. Some GOP lawmakers joined with Democrats to
repeal the law before it could be enforced.
The measures would enshrine current access laws elsewhere
In the Democratic-controlled Colorado and Maryland, the ballot
measures would largely put existing policies into the state
constitutions, though Colorado’s version could also remove financial
barriers to abortion. It would take 55% of the vote to pass there.
Measures maintaining access also are on the ballot in Montana, where
a U.S. Senate race could help determine control of the chamber, and
Nevada, a battleground in the presidential election.
In Nevada, where control of the state government is divided, the
ballot measure would have to be passed this year and again in 2026
to take effect.
New York also has a measure on the ballot that its supporters say
would bolster abortion rights. It doesn’t contain the word
“abortion” but rather bans discrimination on the basis of “pregnancy
outcomes, and reproductive healthcare and autonomy.”
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