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Idaho abortion ban faces potential overturn via November ballot measure

Created at 13 Jul · 11:11 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Idaho's strict abortion ban, prohibiting the procedure at all stages of pregnancy, will be on the November ballot. A measure to reverse the ban, allowing abortions until fetal viability, gathered over 100,000 signatures. This follows a national trend of state-level reproductive rights referendums.

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Key Numbers

100,000signatures gathered for ballot measure
70,725signatures required to get on ballot
2022year Roe v. Wade was overturned
21weeks of pregnancy (fetal viability)
2023year Idaho made it a crime to help minors obtain abortions without parental cons
30 to 40years of pro-life laws potentially invalidated
24weeks of pregnancy allowed in Virginia and Nevada

Who's Involved

Idahoans United for Women & Families
Volunteer group leading the petition drive for the abortion rights measure
David Ripley
CEO of Idaho Chooses Life, preparing to campaign against the ballot measure

↳ Why This Matters

The outcome of this ballot measure will significantly impact reproductive rights in Idaho, potentially reversing a near-total ban and influencing the broader national debate on abortion access following the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Key facts

  • Idaho's strict abortion ban, prohibiting the procedure at all stages of pregnancy, will be subject to a public vote in November.
  • A ballot initiative to reverse the ban, allowing abortions until fetal viability, has been certified.
  • The measure would restore abortion access similar to the period before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
  • Idaho's current ban has limited exceptions and has led some healthcare providers to leave the state.
  • Opponents of the measure anticipate it will invalidate numerous pro-life laws enacted over decades.

Idaho's secretary of state has certified a ballot measure that could overturn one of the nation's strictest abortion bans, allowing voters to decide the issue in November. The measure, spearheaded by the volunteer group Idahoans United for Women & Families, gathered over 100,000 signatures, significantly surpassing the threshold required to appear on the ballot.

If approved by voters, the initiative would establish a law for "reproductive freedom," permitting abortions up to fetal viability, generally around 21 weeks of gestation. This would largely revert Idaho's law to its status before the Supreme Court's 2022 decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, which enabled states to ban or severely restrict abortion.

The current Idaho ban prohibits abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with exceptions only for saving the pregnant person's life or in cases of rape or incest. This strictness has made it difficult for healthcare providers, with many reportedly leaving the state due to severe penalties. Four women have sued the state over complications where they were denied abortions.

Opponents, like David Ripley, CEO of Idaho Chooses Life, anticipate the measure will invalidate decades of pro-life legislation. The situation in Idaho mirrors broader national efforts, as other states like Virginia and Nevada are also considering constitutional amendments to protect abortion rights, while Missouri is voting on reinstating a ban.

Frequently asked questions

Idaho has one of the strictest abortion bans in the U.S., prohibiting the procedure at all stages of pregnancy, with limited exceptions for saving the pregnant person's life or in cases of rape or incest.

If approved, the measure would allow abortions until fetal viability, generally considered around 21 weeks of pregnancy, and permit individuals to make choices regarding abortion, contraception, and fertility treatment.

The ballot measure needed 70,725 signatures, and the organizing group gathered over 100,000.

The severe penalties associated with the ban have led many healthcare providers to leave Idaho, and some women with pregnancy complications have been unable to obtain necessary care.

What Happens Next

01Voters in Idaho will decide on the abortion rights measure in November.
02Opponents will campaign against the measure to preserve the current abortion ban.
03Other states will also hold votes on abortion-related measures in the upcoming election.

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Cadence

How It Developed

Idaho's secretary of state certified a ballot measure to reverse the state's abortion ban.
The measure, led by Idahoans United for Women & Families, gathered over 100,000 signatures.
If approved, the measure would allow abortions until fetal viability, similar to pre-2022 laws.
The ban currently prohibits abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with limited exceptions.
Doctors have left Idaho due to severe penalties under the current law.
An anti-abortion group plans to campaign against the measure.
Other states like Virginia, Nevada, and Missouri are also holding abortion-related votes.

Sources

T1
One of strictest US abortion bans could be overturned in November’s electionThe Guardian

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