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Thursday, Aug 15 2024

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Montana Minors May Seek Abortions Without Parent's OK, Court Rules

Children deserve the same right to privacy as adults when making decisions affecting their bodies, the state Supreme Court says. Meanwhile, Arizona's high court ruled that election materials regarding abortion may include the words "unborn human being" when referring to an embryo or fetus.

Montana鈥檚 Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that minors don鈥檛 need their parents鈥 permission to get an abortion in the state 鈥 agreeing with a lower court ruling that found the parental consent law violates the privacy clause in the state constitution. 鈥淲e conclude that minors, like adults, have a fundamental right to privacy, which includes procreative autonomy and making medical decisions affecting his or her bodily integrity and health in partnership with a chosen health care provider free from governmental interest,鈥 Justice Laurie McKinnon wrote in the unanimous opinion. (Hanson, 8/14)

An informational pamphlet for Arizona voters, who will decide in the fall whether to guarantee a constitutional right to an abortion, can refer to an embryo or fetus as an 鈥渦nborn human being,鈥 the state鈥檚 highest court ruled Wednesday. The Arizona Supreme Court justices sided with Republican lawmakers, who drafted the language sent to all voters in the state, over proponents of the ballot measure on abortion rights. (Govindarao, 8/14)

A Hamilton County Common Pleas Court judge was scheduled to put out a decision today on whether the state鈥檚 six-week abortion ban law could move forward. But that鈥檚 been delayed until Aug. 29. ... Last November, voters approved a reproductive rights amendment which the ACLU of Ohio and others maintain would make the six-week ban unconstitutional. But attorneys for Republican Attorney General Dave Yost have argued parts of the law should remain in force. Ohio legislators have not removed any abortion limits in state law, saying parts of them do not violate the new amendment. Ohio鈥檚 Republican legislative leaders who dominate the General Assembly have said courts should decide the fate of existing state abortion laws. (Ingles, 8/13)

Democrats in New York, following significant losses two years ago, are deploying a now-familiar playbook in half a dozen battleground House races: Accuse Republicans of opposing abortion rights, an approach that has worked in tough races across the country. The party is reviving those anti-abortion attacks in New York and say, this time, they have proof of their claims: the incumbents鈥 voting records. They are painting first-term GOP representatives as hypocrites in a bevy of blistering attacks. (Ngo, 8/14)

Donald Trump still doesn鈥檛 have an answer on how he鈥檒l vote on an abortion measure in his home state. And it鈥檚 about to become a lot harder for him to avoid it. Four months ago, Trump announced he favored leaving the issue of abortion to the states. Now, state-level referendums on the lightning-rod issue are making ballots across the country 鈥 including, on Monday, in the battleground state of Arizona, and on Tuesday in Missouri. (Allison and Sarkissian, 8/14)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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