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Uphill battles that put abortion rights on ballots are unlikely to end even if the measures pass

Voters in nine states are deciding next month whether to add the right to abortion to their constitutions, but the measures are unlikely to dramatically change access 鈥 at least not immediately.
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FILE - Reproductive rights advocate Kat Duesterhaus holds up a sign as U.S. President Joe Biden and his Republican rival, former President Donald Trump speak about abortion access, as the the first general election debate of the 2024 season is projected on a outdoor screen at the Nite Owl drive-in theater, Thursday, June 27, 2024, in Miami. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell, File)

Voters in nine states are deciding next month whether to add the right to abortion to their constitutions, but the measures are unlikely to dramatically change access 鈥 at least not immediately.

Instead, voter approval would launch more lawsuits on a subject that's been 鈥 and more than ever since the U.S. Supreme Court in 2022 and opened the door to state abortion laws. In some states where the issue is on the ballot, it's already widely available.

If Missouri鈥檚 amendment passes and takes effect in December, the measure would not repeal a state ban at all stages of pregnancy or the layers of other regulations 鈥 including a 72-hour waiting period and 44-inch (112-centimeter) doorway rule for clinics 鈥 that forced Planned Parenthood to stop abortions in two offices years before Roe was overturned.

鈥淎 yes vote for this is not a vote to overturn anything. It is a vote to ensure that the courts will have to fight this out for a long time,鈥 said Republican state Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman.

Coleman, who is also a conservative constitutional lawyer, said the Republican-dominated Legislature could also go back to voters to ask them to undo the amendment if it passes.

Still, the measure would mean that 鈥渢he wind will be at our back鈥 in court fights to overturn restrictions, said Emily Wales, the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, which operates in four states and is the only group in recent years to provide abortions in Missouri. The last clinic in Missouri, run by another Planned Parenthood affiliate, stopped offering abortions just before Roe was overturned.

鈥淚t will feel tremendously different to us to say, 鈥楳issourians have a constitutional right. If you鈥檙e going to interfere with it, you鈥檝e got to have a pretty good cause,鈥欌 she said.

There's some precedent for an amendment not settling everything right away. passed last year all but undid a law that banned abortion after cardiac activity can be detected, at about six weeks and before women often realize they鈥檙e pregnant. Enforcement had already been blocked by a court. Ohio advocates in preliminary litigation but those battles aren't finished yet, and they worry lawmakers will block the use of taxpayer funds to support access.

鈥淗aving fewer legal restrictions is not necessarily meaningful to someone if they can鈥檛 afford the financial cost,鈥 said Lexis Dotson-Dufault, executive director of the Abortion Fund of Ohio.

The most populous state with an abortion ballot measure this year is Florida. It would take approval of 60% of voters to win. And Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis's administration has process that got it on the ballot. That could be the basis for a court challenge on whether the amendment would take effect on Jan. 7. Meanwhile, the measure's supporters are over their efforts to get TV stations to stop running one pro-amendment ad.

The office of state Attorney General Ashley Moody, a Republican who , did not respond to an interview request.

A Nevada measure wouldn鈥檛 make an immediate splash because it would be required by law to not only pass in November, but in 2026 as well.

In Colorado, Maryland and specifically but bans discrimination based on 鈥減regnancy outcomes鈥 鈥 abortion is already allowed at least until viability 鈥 generally considered to be after 20 weeks, with some exceptions.

Colorado's measure would also repeal a ban on using taxpayer funds for abortion. A new law would be needed for abortion to be added to health insurance for government employees and people with Medicaid coverage.

Arizona鈥檚 amendment would go into effect with a governor鈥檚 proclamation if voters approve it. The state bars abortion after 15 weeks 鈥 and most occur before then. Earlier this year, some Republican lawmakers in the political battleground state joined with Democrats to repeal a much more restrictive 1864 ban before it could be enforced.

In Nebraska, the : One would bar abortion after 12 weeks of pregnancy, with some exceptions, echoing the current ban but leaving open the possibility of tighter restrictions. The other would allow abortion until viability.

To take effect, an amendment would need not only majority support, but more votes than the other measure.

In South Dakota, where abortion is banned throughout pregnancy, opponents and over prohibit the state from regulating abortion in the first trimester and allow regulations for the second and third trimesters only under certain health circumstances.

If the measure is adopted and survives the challenge, it would take effect July 1, 2025.

Life Defense Fund is focused on its campaign to defeat the measure at the ballot box rather than what might come next, said group spokesperson Caroline Woods.

Dakotans for Health sponsored the amendment and expects the Republican-dominated Legislature to try to 鈥渢hread that needle鈥 and impose restrictions during the second trimester if the amendment passes, said group cofounder Rick Weiland.

And that would probably mean more lawsuits.

鈥淭his is an issue that鈥檚 never going to go away,鈥 Weiland said.

Geoff Mulvihill, The Associated Press