Las Vegas Review-Journal

New Colo. law protects abortion rights

Gov. Polis: Restrictio­ns ‘government overreach’

- By James Anderson

DENVER — Colorado joined a handful of other states Monday in codifying the right to abortion in statute, a party-line response to efforts across the country to limit abortion access in anticipati­on of a pending U.S. Supreme Court ruling on a challenge to the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that banned states from outlawing abortion.

Gov. Jared Polis signed into law the Reproducti­ve Health Equity Act, which passed the Democratic-led Legislatur­e despite fierce opposition by minority Republican­s. The law guarantees access to reproducti­ve care before and after pregnancy and bans local government­s from imposing their own restrictio­ns.

It also declares that fertilized eggs, embryos and fetuses have no independen­t rights. That’s a response to failed ballot initiative­s that sought to restrict abortion by giving embryos the rights of born humans. In 2014, voters rejected a proposal to add unborn human beings to the state’s criminal code, allowing prosecutor­s to charge anyone who kills a fetus with a crime.

“Colorado has been, is and will be a pro-choice state,” Polis said, calling increasing abortion restrictio­ns elsewhere “an enormous government overreach, an enormous government infringeme­nt” of individual rights. “No matter what the Supreme Court does in the future, people in Colorado will be able to choose when and if they have children.”

Colorado was the first state to decriminal­ize abortion in most cases in 1967, and it allows access to abortion but had nothing in state law guaranteei­ng it. New Jersey, Oregon and Vermont had previously codified the right to abortion throughout pregnancy, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research organizati­on that supports abortion rights.

Republican­s would still be able to introduce legislatio­n and ballot measures to reverse the new law. For that reason, abortion rights groups are weighing a 2024 constituti­onal ballot measure, much like Nevada did in 1990.

Colorado Democrats cited the high court’s considerat­ion of a Mississipp­i case that could overrule Roe v. Wade, as well as a new Texas law banning abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. If Roe is overturned fully, at least 26 states are likely to either ban abortion outright or severely limit access, the Guttmacher Institute says.

“We don’t want to ever see what’s happening in Texas to happen in Colorado,” said House Majority Leader Rep. Daneya Esgar, a sponsor of the Colorado legislatio­n.

Idaho has enacted a law modeled after the Texas statute. Missouri lawmakers have introduced a bill to make it illegal for the state’s residents to get abortions in other states. Arizona’s legislatur­e has approved a ban on abortion after 15 weeks and, like other states, has a law that would automatica­lly ban abortion if Roe is overturned.

 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press ?? Colorado Gov. Jared Polis speaks Monday before signing into law the reproducti­ve health equity act during a ceremony in Denver. The bill’s sponsors, Sen. Julie Gonzalez, far right, Rep. Meg Froelich, center, and House majority leader Daneya Esgar, look on.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press Colorado Gov. Jared Polis speaks Monday before signing into law the reproducti­ve health equity act during a ceremony in Denver. The bill’s sponsors, Sen. Julie Gonzalez, far right, Rep. Meg Froelich, center, and House majority leader Daneya Esgar, look on.

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