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Abortion laws by state, explained

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mystery-ak:
 Abortion laws by state, explained
by Nathaniel Weixel - 04/11/24 4:35 PM ET

When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, it allowed states under Republican control to impose abortion bans or severe limitations, a long-sought goal for many GOP anti-abortion lawmakers.

Abortion access now is a state-by-state patchwork of laws that is ever-changing as new restrictions take effect. 

Here’s where the laws stand as of today:

Tracking abortion laws across the country
Abortion access now is a state-by-state patchwork of laws that is ever-changing as new restrictions take effect.

Full ban

Alabama: Bans abortions with limited exceptions. “Trigger” law went into effect days after Roe was overturned.   

Arizona: Abortion is banned after 15 weeks. The state Supreme Court on April 9 said a near-total ban from 1864 can be enforced, but the ruling is on hold, pending further legal action. It could take effect in May or June.

Arkansas: A near total abortion ban went into effect shortly after Roe was overturned.

Idaho: Abortion is almost completely banned with few exceptions; a judge blocked part of the law that allowed doctors to be prosecuted for performing an abortion in a medical emergency

Indiana: A near-total ban took effect Aug. 1. It was the first state to limit or ban abortions after Roe was overturned.

Kentucky: Abortion is almost completely banned, with limited exceptions.

Louisiana: Abortion is almost completely banned, with limited exceptions.

Mississippi: Abortion is almost completely banned, with limited exceptions. 

Missouri: Abortion is almost completely banned, with limited exceptions. “Trigger” law took effect shortly after Roe was overturned.

North Dakota: Abortion is almost completely banned, with very limited exceptions.

Oklahoma: A near-total abortion ban with limited exceptions went into effect shortly after Roe was overturned.   

South Dakota: A near-total abortion ban with limited exceptions went into effect shortly after Roe was overturned.

Tennessee: A near-total abortion ban with limited exceptions went into effect shortly after Roe was overturned     

Texas: Abortion is almost completely banned, with very limited exceptions. Private citizens can also sue abortion providers and those who assist patients seeking an abortion after about six weeks of pregnancy.

West Virginia: Abortion is almost completely banned, with limited exceptions
6 weeks

Florida: A 15-week abortion ban is in place. The state Supreme Court on April 1 said the Florida Constitution does not protect abortion, which will allow a six-week ban to take effect 30 days later.

Georgia: A “heartbeat” law bans abortions after about six weeks.

South Carolina: A “heartbeat” law bans abortions after about six weeks 
12-18 weeks

Nebraska: Abortion is banned at 12 weeks and later.

North Carolina: Abortion is banned after 12 weeks.

Utah: Abortion is banned at 18 weeks and later.A near-total ban is temporarily blocked in court, but other laws seek to shutter abortion clinics operating in the state.
Legal

Alaska: Abortion is legal and constitutionally protected.

California: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Colorado: Abortion is legal with no gestational restrictions.

Connecticut: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Delaware: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

District of Columbia: Abortion is legal with no gestational restriction.

Hawaii: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Illinois: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Iowa: Abortion is legal up to viability. A six-week “heartbeat law” ban was temporarily blocked by the courts.

Kansas: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Maine: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability. 

Maryland: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

Massachusetts: Abortion is legal up to 24 weeks.

Michigan: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Minnesota: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

Montana: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability; the GOP governor and legislature may try to change that.

Nevada: Abortion is legal up to 24 weeks.

New Hampshire: Abortion is legal up to 24 weeks.

New Jersey: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

New Mexico: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

New York: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Ohio: A ballot amendment approved in November makes abortion legal up until 22 weeks

Oregon: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

Pennsylvania: Abortion is legal up to 24 weeks.

Rhode Island: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Vermont: Abortion is legal with no gestational limits.

Virginia: Abortion is legal until the start of the third trimester, around 27 or 28 weeks.

Washington: Abortion is legal up to fetal viability.

Wisconsin: Abortion is legal up to 22 weeks.

Wyoming: Two near-total abortion bans are blocked by the courts.

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/4588813-abortion-laws-by-state-explained/

Bigun:
Montana Supreme Court Rejects Parental Consent on Abortion

By a vote of 7 to 0, the Montana supreme court ruled yesterday (in Planned Parenthood v. Montana) that a state law enacted in 2013 that generally requires parental consent for a minor’s abortion violates the state constitution. Justice Laurie McKinnon wrote the majority opinion for six justices, and a seventh justice concurred in the judgment.

The court’s ruling rests in large part on its concoction of a “fundamental” right to abortion in its 1999 ruling in Armstrong v. State, which invalidated a state law that allowed only licensed physicians to perform abortions. In Armstrong, the court ruled that the “right of individual privacy” set forth in the constitution that the state adopted in 1972 included a right to abortion. Never mind that Montana law from Montana’s time as a territory up through 1972 had broadly prohibited abortion. Never mind that, however accustomed we now are to hearing abortion sloppily referred to as a “privacy” right, it would have been bizarre to refer to it that way in 1972. (As John Hart Ely wrote in his famous critique of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision a year later, abortion “has nothing to do with privacy in the Bill of Rights sense or any other the Constitution suggests.”)

The court adds its own usurpations to reach its result. I’ll highlight two. ...

Excerpt: Rest at headline link

Smokin Joe:
Relax, little one. You are safe in North Dakota.


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