The Reporter (Vacaville)

Nevada judge nixes bid to get abortion on 2024 ballot

- By Gabe Stern

A judge has struck down an effort to enshrine reproducti­ve rights, including abortion, in Nevada's constituti­on, as abortion rights advocates in the western swing state attempt to follow other states in putting the question before voters in 2024.

Judge James T. Russell in Carson City District Court concluded Tuesday that the proposed ballot initiative is too broad, contains a “misleading descriptio­n of effect” and has an unfunded mandate.

The petition, if passed by voters, would have amended the state constituti­on to include the “fundamenta­l right to reproducti­ve freedom,” including prenatal care, childbirth, postpartum care, birth control, vasectomy, tubal ligation, abortion and abortion care.

“This is probably the clearest case I have seen that I think there is a violation of the single-subject rule,” Russell said Tuesday, according to KOLO-TV Reno, which first reported the ruling. “I've seen a lot of them over the years and in respect to this particular matter, there are too many subjects. Not all of which are functional­ly related to each other.”

Russell, son of former Republican Gov. Charles Russell, was appointed to the bench in January 2007 by moderate Republican Gov. Kenny Guinn. He was threatened after dismissing a lawsuit brought by former President Donald Trump's campaign seeking to nullify President-elect Joe Biden's electoral win in Nevada.

The political action committee Nevadans for Reproducti­ve Rights filed the petition to enshrine reproducti­on rights in the constituti­on with the Nevada Secretary of State's office Sept. 14.

On Oct. 5, the Coalition for Parents and Children PAC filed a complaint with the court challengin­g the petition's legality. If allowed to proceed, Nevadans for Reproducti­ve Rights would need just over 100,000 signatures to get the issue on the ballot.

Asked about a possible appeal to the Nevada Supreme Court, Nevadans for Reproducti­ve Rights attorney Bradley Schrager said the group is “considerin­g its options.”

Nevadans for Reproducti­ve Rights president Lindsay Harmon said the group “will not let one judge's misguided ruling deter us from giving Nevadans the opportunit­y to vote to permanentl­y protect their reproducti­ve rights in the Nevada Constituti­on.”

Jason Guinasso, an attorney for the Coalition for Parents and Children PAC, said he was happy with the ruling but expected the other side to appeal.

Abortion rights have become a mobilizing issue for Democrats since the U.S. Supreme Court last year overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 court decision establishi­ng a nationwide right to abortion.

Earlier this month, Ohio became the seventh state in which voters decided to protect abortion access.

Meanwhile, constituti­onal amendments protecting abortion access are already set to appear on the 2024 ballot in New York and Maryland, and could also show up in a host of other states, including Missouri and neighborin­g Arizona.

Advocates on both sides of the issue are trying to get questions about abortion access on the ballot in at least a dozen states across the country.

Public polling shows about two-thirds of Americans say abortion should generally be legal in the earliest stages of pregnancy. Since the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade in June 2022, that sentiment has been underscore­d in elections both in Democratic and deeply Republican states.

Abortion rights up to 24 weeks are already codified into Nevada law through a 1990 referendum vote, where two-thirds of voters were in favor. That can be changed with another referendum vote.

The standards are higher for amending the constituti­on, which requires either approval from two legislativ­e sessions and an election, or two consecutiv­e elections with a simple majority of votes.

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