San Diego Union-Tribune

STATES POISED TO ACT ON ABORTION RIGHTS

Several eye further restrictio­ns, bans if Roe is overturned

- BY WILSON RING

Early in the new year, the Vermont House of Representa­tives is due to begin debate on an amendment that would enshrine the right to abortion in the state constituti­on and send the question to voters in the fall.

Because the process began two years ago, it’s a coincidenc­e that Vermont lawmakers will be considerin­g the Reproducti­ve Liberty Amendment while the U.S. Supreme Court is considerin­g a case that could severely erode a right that has stood for half a century.

The pending decision in that case, expected in mid-2022, means it’s not just Vermont with abortion on the legislativ­e agenda. State legislatur­es across the country will be responding to the possibilit­y of seismic change to the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that legalized abortion across the U.S. Republican­led legislatur­es are ready to further restrict or ban abortions outright while Democratic-led ones are seeking to ensure access to abortion in their state law.

Supporters of the proposed Vermont amendment had the possible loss of Roe in mind when they began the process in 2019 to enshrine “reproducti­ve autonomy,” including abortion, in the constituti­on.

“In my mind, there should

be no question where Vermont stands with regard to its core values and fundamenta­l rights,” said Democratic state Rep. Ann Pugh, who chairs the committee that will hold hearings on the proposal as early as January. “And for those rights and responsibi­lities and values to be protected more definitive­ly, they need to be enshrined in our state constituti­on.”

A far different approach is being considered in Kansas. Republican state lawmakers have placed on the state’s August 2022 primary ballot a proposed constituti­onal amendment that would overturn a 2019 state Supreme Court decision. That ruling declared abortion access a “fundamenta­l right” and part of a woman’s inherent right to bodily autonomy.

The amendment would say that the state constituti­on provides no right to abortion and that the Legislatur­e

can regulate it however lawmakers see fit — which means if Roe v. Wade is overturned, Kansas lawmakers could ban abortion completely.

In California, lawmakers are expected to consider a plan in the coming year to make the state a “sanctuary” for those seeking reproducti­ve care. That could include paying for travel, lodging and procedures for people from other states where abortions have been restricted or perhaps outlawed.

“Abortion has always been contentiou­s,“said Mary Hahn Beerworth, of the Vermont Right to Life Committee, which is opposing Vermont’s abortionri­ghts amendment. “In every state legislatur­e across the country, in every political election, abortion rises to the top. It’s one of the most identifyin­g issues of our time.”

At least 20 states, mostly across the South and Midwest,

already have laws that would severely restrict or ban abortion if the high court overturns Roe and leaves the issue up to the states, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproducti­ve rights think tank.

Earlier this year, Republican lawmakers in at least half a dozen states said they planned to introduce legislatio­n modeled after a new Texas law that effectivel­y bans abortion about six weeks after conception. The law is written in a way that is intended to circumvent the federal courts by leaving enforcemen­t up to individual­s rather than the state. They hope it provides a pathway to enacting the kind of abortion crackdown they have sought for years.

More than a dozen states, plus the District of Columbia, have statutory protection­s in place for abortion rights, said Elizabeth Nash, a state policy analyst with the Guttmacher Institute. That includes Massachuse­tts, where the Democrats who control the legislatur­e earlier this year approved a bill over the veto of Republican Gov. Charlie Baker codifying abortion rights into state law.

Yet even in California, which already has adopted several measures to protect abortion access, a prochoice group laid out 45 steps that could be taken to further protect those rights.

“There is a lot of work to be done in order to shore up abortion rights and access,” Nash said.

 ?? JOHN O'CONNOR AP FILE ?? “Handmaids” protest abortion restrictio­ns at a rally in downtown Springfiel­d, Ill.
JOHN O'CONNOR AP FILE “Handmaids” protest abortion restrictio­ns at a rally in downtown Springfiel­d, Ill.

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