The Guardian (USA)

Pro-choice advocates file paperwork for Ohio ballot initiative on abortion

- Poppy Noor

Today, reproducti­ve health advocates in Ohio are handing in language to the state’s attorney general, looking to bring a ballot initiative on abortion to voters in November 2023.

Following the US supreme court’s decision to overturn Roe v Wade last summer – which had secured a federal right to abortion – an Ohio ban on abortions after six weeks of pregnancy immediatel­y came into effect. That ban was then put on hold by an Ohio judge in October 2022, restoring abortion rights in the state up to 22 weeks of pregnancy until further notice.

But the group bringing the petition, Ohioans United for Reproducti­ve Rights (OPRR), are hoping to put the issue to rest.

“Ohioans are perilously close to losing access to safe, legal, comprehens­ive reproducti­ve medical care,” OPRR executive director Dr Lauren Beene said in a virtual press conference today, adding: “This commonsens­e amendment ensures that physicians will be able to provide the care our patients need and deserve free from government interferen­ce.”

Once the language has been submitted, the Ohio Ballot Board and attorney general each has ten days to review it. If approved, campaigner­s will need to collect in excess of 400,000 signatures in orderto qualify to be on the ballot. If the ballot language is denied, campaigner­s – a coalition of lawyers, doctors and activists from organizati­ons such as Planned Parenthood, the ACLU and Ohio Physicians for Reproducti­ve Rights – will have to make changes and re-submit it.

The ballot could be the seventh such ballot to put the question of abortion directly to voters. In August 2022, voters in Kansas sent shock waves through the country when they rejected a ballot initiative brought by an anti-choice legislatur­e, looking to confirm there was no right to abortion protected by the state’s constituti­on.

Voting 59% to 41% in favor of protecting abortion rights, the ballot reaffirmed an earlier decision by the Kansas supreme court in 2019 stating abortion is indeed protected in the state’s constituti­on, under the right to autonomy. The loss sent a stark warning to anti-abortion advocates that abortion restrictio­ns may not be successful at the ballot box.

A string of similar wins for abortion rights during the 2022 midterms only added to that warning, when ballot initiative­s brought in California, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont all further secured abortion rights when put to a popular vote.

Since the midterms, legislatur­es across the country have made moves to blunt the force of citizen-led ballot initiative­s in states that allow them. At present, Florida, Missouri, Ohio, Idaho, Oklahoma and North Dakota are all weighing bills that would make it harder for ballot initiative­s to be passed.

In Ohio, a bill has been introduced looking to raise the threshold for ballot proposals to be accepted, from a simple majority to 60% of the vote. It would also require those bringing a petition to collect signatures from all 88 Ohio counties instead of the 44 counties currently required to get a measure on the ballot.

That same bill did not garner enough support to get past the house when it was brought in a legislativ­e session just a few months ago, in December 2022. If passed this time, the question of whether to restrict the citizenled ballot initiative process will also be put to voters in November 2023.

Polling suggests that Ohioans support keeping abortion mostly legal in the state. Ohio Republican­s tend to be less supportive of abortion rights than independen­t voters and Democrats, but research on a small sample by Suffolk University in 2022 suggests that most Ohioans would vote to pro

tect abortion rights given the opportunit­y.

“The tremendous and unpreceden­ted level of grassroots support for our effort to constituti­onally protect reproducti­ve rights and abortion access is truly inspiring and demonstrat­es how necessary this issue is for Ohioans,” OPRR president Dr Marcela Azevedo said at the press conference.

“We are eager to begin collecting the signatures needed to place the amendment on the ballot so Ohioans, rather than government and extremist politician­s, have the opportunit­y to determine the future of reproducti­ve health care in our state,” she said.

This article was amended on 21 February 2023. An earlier version said paperwork had been filed for a referendum on abortion, rather than a ballot initiative.

 ?? Photograph: Jason Whitman/NurPhoto/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Six-week ban on abortions in Ohio came into effect after overturnin­g of Roe v Wade, but was put on hold by a state judge in October 2022, restoring abortion rights until further notice.
Photograph: Jason Whitman/NurPhoto/REX/Shuttersto­ck Six-week ban on abortions in Ohio came into effect after overturnin­g of Roe v Wade, but was put on hold by a state judge in October 2022, restoring abortion rights until further notice.

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