sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Abortion rights wins in Kentucky, elsewhere stoke supporters

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) 鈥 Lexie Overstreet logged plenty of miles on foot, knocking on doors to try to persuade Kentuckians not to take away one of the last legal paths to restoring abortion rights in the state.
20221113101124-63710ce0821cf083b821e242jpeg
Supporters react as preliminary results come in for Michigan Proposal 3 on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022, in Detroit, Mich. Abortion rights supporters won in the four states where access was on the ballot Tuesday, as voters enshrined it into the state constitution in battleground Michigan as well as blue California and Vermont and dealt a defeat to an anti-abortion measure in deep-red Kentucky. (Ryan Sun/Ann Arbor News via AP)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) 鈥 Lexie Overstreet logged plenty of miles on foot, knocking on doors to try to persuade Kentuckians not to take away one of the last legal paths to restoring abortion rights in the state.

Now she's hoping her side's win at the ballot box Tuesday will convince the state's highest court to throw out a sweeping abortion ban passed by the Republican-led legislature.

鈥淚t was great to wake up this morning and know that Kentuckians are on the same side as me,鈥 the 21-year-old University of Louisville student and volunteer said after the election. 鈥淎nd know that the thousands of doors that I knocked aren鈥檛 going to be forgotten and that all those people I talked to, they cast their vote and their vote was heard.鈥

Whether those voices will resonate with the Kentucky Supreme Court, which is set to hear arguments for and against the ban Tuesday, hinges on legal arguments about whether state constitutional protections extend to a right to an abortion. With a hearing set for Tuesday, the case looms as the first legal test for abortion rights after midterm elections in which voters across the country came down firmly on the side of keeping abortion legal. No timeline has been given for a ruling.

In Kentucky, abortion rights supporters think the amendment's rejection should be a consideration as the justices hear the case.

鈥淢y hope is that the Supreme Court will listen to the will of the people and know that the people have rejected extremism and rule accordingly,鈥 Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democrat, said in the days leading up to the pivotal court hearing.

Beshear, who is running for reelection next year, can take comfort in knowing that his position on abortion rights puts him squarely on the side of a majority of Kentuckians. But one of the GOP candidates hoping to take his job next year said the vote shouldn't be a factor.

Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron said the result, though disappointing, didn't change his belief that there is 鈥渘o right to abortion hidden in the Kentucky Constitution.鈥 Abortion policy, Cameron said, 鈥渂elongs to our elected representatives in the General Assembly鈥 to decide.

Right now it belongs to the courts, with attention shifting to the courtroom at the Kentucky Capitol in Frankfort, where the Supreme Court justices will hear arguments in the case.

Those arguments will center on a from July, when he wrote that the state鈥檚 new, post-Roe abortion bans likely violate 鈥渢he rights to privacy and self-determination鈥 protected by Kentucky鈥檚 constitution. Judge Mitch Perry said it was not the court鈥檚 role to determine whether the state constitution contains the right to abortion, but whether the state鈥檚 restrictive laws violate freedoms guaranteed by its constitution.

It's unclear how much impact, if any, the anti-abortion measure鈥檚 defeat will have on the court's views on the case.

鈥淚t may well differ from justice to justice,鈥 said University of Louisville law professor Samuel Marcosson. 鈥淪ome of them may view the defeat of the initiative as a strong signal that Kentuckians believe there is and should be a right in the constitution, and this could empower those justices to rule that way. Others may say that it is at best an uncertain signal, and that it remains a task for them to determine the meaning of the constitution.鈥

Abortion opponents had hoped to shut off such a path through the courts. The amendment would have added 鈥渃larity and an extra level of protection against judicial activism,鈥 said David Walls, executive director of The Family Foundation, a faith-based organization opposed to abortion.

Currently, abortions are mostly on hold in Kentucky, based on a trigger law at the center of the case before the state Supreme Court. Approved by lawmakers in 2019, the ban took effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned in June by . That law ended all abortions with narrow exceptions to save a pregnant woman鈥檚 life or to prevent disabling injury. There are no exceptions for rape or incest victims. in August kept the ban in place while it reviews the case. A separate six-week ban that Kentucky lawmakers approved also is being challenged.

Now abortion rights supporters hope the amendment's defeat is a springboard to victory in court.

鈥淚t is an important step in continuing the legal fight for abortion access in this state,鈥 said Rachel Sweet of Protect Kentucky Access, an abortion-rights coalition. "Moreover, it is a repudiation of the extreme anti-choice agenda that is out of step with most voters鈥 values and beliefs.鈥

Attorneys for the two abortion clinics left in Kentucky 鈥 both of them in Louisville, the state's largest city 鈥 will ask the state's high court for an injunction to allow abortions to resume while the case is litigated.

Meanwhile, abortion rights supporters secured wins Michigan, California and Vermont voted to enshrine abortion rights in their state constitutions. Voters in Montana rejected a ballot measure that would have forced medical workers to attempt lifesaving measures in the rare event of a baby born after an attempted abortion.

In Michigan, Democrats who took control of the Legislature for the first time in decades have signaled that affirming reproductive rights will be one of their top priorities in 2023.

Abortion rights supporters in Vermont are planning to ask the legislature to enact shield laws to protect Vermont providers that perform abortion services for out-of-state travelers.

In Kentucky, Cameron downplayed the anti-abortion amendment's defeat in a post-election filing with the Supreme Court, saying the outcome 鈥渉as no bearing on whether the court should create a Kentucky Roe v. Wade.鈥

鈥淚n short, because Kentucky voters chose to leave their Constitution as is, the constitutional text that the court must interpret to resolve this appeal is the same today as it was before" the vote, the Republican attorney general wrote.

But Overstreet, the University of Louisville student and abortion rights volunteer, said the voters' rejection of the Kentucky amendment spoke volumes about where the people stand.

鈥淚 have family from Appalachia, and I grew up in the city,鈥 she said. 鈥淧eople really underestimate Kentucky. People think that Kentucky is regressive. They think that Kentuckians don鈥檛 believe in one another. But that鈥檚 just absolutely not true. Kentuckians want abortion access. And that鈥檚 what this amendment has shown us.鈥

___

Associated Press writers Wilson Ring in Stowe, Vermont; and Joey Cappelletti in Lansing, Michigan, contributed to this report.

Bruce Schreiner And Dylan Lovan, The Associated Press