Baltimore Sun

Advocates: State ‘solid’ in protecting abortion rights

Maryland Constituti­on doesn’t define protection for access

- By Pamela Wood

As advocates fret over the future of access to abortion in the U.S. following the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, they believe abortion rights are well-protected in Maryland — despite a lack of success for recent efforts to include them in the state’s constituti­on.

“We’re solid as a state when it comes to abortion access,” said Diana Philip, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Maryland.

Republican President Donald Trump already has appointed two justices — Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh — and is poised to nominate a third justice to replace the liberal Ginsburg.

But even if a more conservati­ve court modifies or overturns the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion procedures nationally, Maryland wouldn’t see any changes immediatel­y to abortion access.

It’s been protected in Maryland since 1992, when voters approved enshrining the Roe provisions in state law. The approval came by a wide margin: nearly 62%

supported the law, and about 38% opposed it. That means it’s exceedingl­y difficult for abortion opponents to pass laws to ban abortions or restrict access.

Several such bills are introduced each year in the General Assembly, but they typically do not gain traction in the legislativ­e process.

That’s why, pro-abortion advocates say, they did not join attempts in the past few years to put abortion rights on the ballot again in the form of an amendment to the Maryland Constituti­on.

Even with Trump expected to pick another conservati­ve justice to replace Ginsburg, who died of cancer Friday, Philip said, abortion rights are not seriously at risk in Maryland. It’s one of 15 states that has laws preserving access to abortion “if Roe should fall,” Philip said.

It makes more sense to focus on the 35 states without such laws, she said.

“I would rather see more energy and funding go to states engaged in their own statutory protection­s,” Philip said.

Trump has said he will name his choice Saturday, and the Republican U.S. Senate leaders appear to have the votes in hand to approve a nominee before the Nov. 3 election.

Back in 2018, Maryland House of Delegates Speaker Michael E. Busch championed the idea of a constituti­onal amendment on abortion, and the state Democratic Party announced its support, as well. They cited other states passing bills to restrict abortions and concerns that a Supreme Court weighted in the future with Trump nominees might uphold those laws and overturn Roe.

In the 2019 General Assembly session, Busch, a Democrat, proposed adding the following sentence to the Maryland Constituti­on’s Declaratio­n of Rights: “That the people have the right to bodily integrity and privacy to make personal decisions about childbeari­ng and procreatio­n without unwarrante­d government intrusion.”

If abortion rights were placed in the state constituti­on, Busch and others argued, it would take another constituti­onal amendment — again, approved by voters — to undo the right to an abortion.

But then-Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller Jr., also a Democrat, threw cold water on Busch’s push, saying lawmakers should only take up referendum bills in the same year that they would appear on the ballot. That only happens in years with elections across the state, such as in 2020.

A lack of support from abortion-rights groups didn’t help the cause, either. NARAL and Planned Parenthood, a nonprofit organizati­on that is the largest abortion provider in the country, did not support the effort.

“A constituti­onal amendment felt like it was something that was not needed in our state, when other states need so much more than we do,” Philip said.

Realizing his effort was futile, Busch withdrew his bill and vowed to try again in 2020.

“I don’t want to see it chipped away bit by bit,” Busch told The Washington Post at the time. “It’s important not only now, but for the next generation­s.”

Less than two months later, Busch died in office. Adrienne A. Jones, a Democrat who succeeded Busch as speaker, is interested in the issue, but didn’t introduce a proposed constituti­onal amendment in the 2020 session.

“Both Speaker Busch and Speaker Jones found it frustratin­g that there wasn’t more vocal and boisterous support for this effort from the advocacy community in a state like Maryland,” said Alexandra Hughes, chief of staff to both Busch and Jones. “Protecting a woman’s right to choose in the state constituti­on is critical at a time when the federal government continues to erode women’s health care protection­s.”

A 2020 proposal from Democratic Sen. Susan Lee of Montgomery County was withdrawn shortly before a scheduled hearing. Lee said the hearing was in the final week of the pandemic-shortened session, and she felt there wasn’t enough time to give the proposal sufficient considerat­ion and debate.

Karen Nelson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Maryland, said while the odds of anti-abortion legislatio­n passing aren’t zero, the legislatur­e has a strong majority of lawmakers who support abortion rights.

That’s why, she said, a constituti­onal amendment wasn’t necessary before and isn’t strongly under considerat­ion now.

“We’re so lucky to have supportive legislator­s and supportive leadership that care about reproducti­ve rights and abortion protection­s in this state,” Nelson said. “So, we feel pretty confident that’s where we would remain going forward.”

The state’s Democratic Party appears less enthusiast­ic about a constituti­onal amendment than it was two years ago, saying now it would support a state constituti­onal amendment “if necessary.”

“We will fight to elect pro-choice Democrats who will uphold these rights, and who will support reproducti­ve rights through legislatio­n, and constituti­onal amendment if necessary,” said Yvette Lewis, the party’s chair, in a statement.

Maryland Right to Life, which opposes abortion, argues a constituti­onal amendment would take power away from legislator­s who are the citizens’ chosen representa­tives.

“It would prevent elected lawmakers from passing any common-sense health and safety measures for women,” said Laura Bodley, director of legislatio­n for Maryland Right to Life.

Bodley said anti-abortion advocates sent 30,000 emails and letters opposing the constituti­onal amendment in 2019, and more than 150 people packed hearing room to testify against it in 2020, just before it was withdrawn. “We actively opposed it and discourage­d its passage,” she said.

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