Voters Decide on Abortion Laws: Wins and Losses Across the U. S.
USAThu Nov 07 2024
Advertisement
In a series of ballot measures across the U. S. , voters have spoken on abortion rights. Seven states decided to protect or expand these rights, while three others said no. Arizona and Missouri voters chose to safeguard abortion access until fetal viability, ultimately overriding existing laws. However, Florida, Nebraska, and South Dakota rejected similar proposals. This marks a significant shift, as it's the first time such measures have failed since the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade in 2022.
In Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New York, and Colorado, voters approved measures to officially enshrine existing abortion rights into their constitutions. Organizers aim to prevent future lawmakers from rolling back these protections. Nebraska had two competing measures on the ballot. One, which was approved, will keep abortion legal in the first trimester but ban it afterwards, except in medical emergencies or cases of rape or incest. The other measure, which would have protected abortion rights until fetal viability, was rejected.
Florida's proposed amendment needed 60% voter approval to pass, but it fell short with 57% support. This preserves the state's six-week abortion ban, which has exceptions for rape, incest, and the mother's life. South Dakota's proposed amendment aimed to legalize first-trimester abortions and allow state regulation of second-trimester abortions, provided they were related to the mother's health. It also would have permitted third-trimester abortions if necessary to save the mother's life. However, this measure was rejected, maintaining the state's near-total abortion ban.
https://localnews.ai/article/voters-decide-on-abortion-laws-wins-and-losses-across-the-u-s-f6b26bc5
actions
flag content