HomeNewsTrendsHealthUS: Ohio lone state deciding abortion rights question, providing hints for 2024 races

US: Ohio lone state deciding abortion rights question, providing hints for 2024 races

Voters will decide whether to pass a constitutional amendment guaranteeing an individual right to abortion and other forms of reproductive healthcare.

November 07, 2023 / 19:12 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
US: Ohio lone state deciding abortion rights question, providing hints for 2024 races
US: Ohio lone state deciding abortion rights question, providing hints for 2024 races

Ohio becomes the latest flashpoint on November 7 in the nation's ongoing battle over abortion access since the US Supreme Court overturned a constitutional right to the procedure last year. Voters will decide whether to pass a constitutional amendment guaranteeing an individual right to abortion and other forms of reproductive healthcare.

Ohio is the only state to consider a statewide abortion-rights question this year, fuelling tens of millions of dollars in campaign spending, boisterous rallies for and against the amendment, and months of advertising and social media messaging, some of it misleading. With a single spotlight on abortion rights this year, advocates on both sides of the issue are watching the outcome for signs of voter sentiment heading into 2024, when abortion-rights supporters are planning to put measures on the ballot in several other states, including Arizona, Missouri and Florida. Early voter turnout has also been robust.

Story continues below Advertisement

Public polling shows about two-thirds of Americans say abortion should generally be legal in the earliest stages of pregnancy, a sentiment that has been underscored in half a dozen states since the Supreme Court's decision reversing Roe v Wade in June 2022. In both Democratic and deeply Republican states California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont voters have either affirmed abortion access or turned back attempts to undermine the right.

Voter approval of the constitutional amendment in Ohio, known as Issue 1, would undo a 2019 state law passed by Republicans that bans most abortions at around six weeks into pregnancy, with no exceptions for rape and incest. That law, currently on hold because of court challenges, is one of roughly two dozen restrictions on abortion the Ohio Legislature has passed in recent years. Issue 1 specifically declares an individual's right to make and carry out one's own reproductive decisions, including birth control, fertility treatments, miscarriage and abortion.