Dems want abortion to be a constitutional right
SACRAMENTO >> The right to an abortion and to use or refuse contraceptives would be enshrined in the California Constitution under an amendment announced Wednesday by Democratic legislative leaders who are seeking to blunt a U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning abortion protections.
Lawmakers are moving quickly to place the amendment on the November ballot, which would likely boost turnout from both sides of the abortion debate. The announcement of the amendment came a day after a California primary election that produced abysmal turnout.
Conservative states — Alabama, Louisiana, Tennessee and West Virginia — have amended their constitutions to declare abortion not protected. Meanwhile, over a dozen states have some abortion protections codified in law, where lawmakers want to extend rights into pregnancy and contraceptives.
Voters in Vermont will consider an amendment in November that would protect “personal reproductive autonomy,” but it does not include the word “abortion” and allows for an exception “justified by a compelling State interest achieved by the least restrictive means.”
California's proposal goes a step beyond with the language on contraceptives. Some believe that if the high court overturns federal abortion protections, conservative groups will push for a ban on contraceptives.
“Too many times, history has shown us that human rights must be enshrined in the constitution so that no one can infringe upon them,” said Sen. Toni Atkins, a Democrat and president pro tempore of the California Senate.