A measure that would ban abortions in Colorado after 22 weeks of pregnancy, except in cases where the mother’s life is at risk, failed Tuesday night.
Both supporters and opponents of Proposition 115 had predicted a tight battle over what supporters of the ban call “late-term abortion,” but opponents declared victory about an hour after the polls closed.
“We voted no because we trust patients and families to make the personal medical decisions that are right for them, without political interference,” Vote No on 115 campaign manager Lucy Olena said. “We voted no to keep Colorado a safe haven for abortion access because no one should have to cross borders to get the medical care they need.”
The measure went down 40% to 60%, according to unofficial returns but with about 75% of the vote tallied. The Associated Press called the race at 9:42 p.m.
Coloradans have swiftly defeated three other ballot measures since 2008 that attempted to define a fetus as a person under the criminal code, but this question was different, targeting the point in pregnancy at which a fetus might survive outside the womb.
Abortion-rights advocates and anti-abortion organizations across the nation had their eyes on the Colorado measure, especially in the wake of the death of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an abortion-rights proponent, and the confirmation of her conservative replacement, Amy Coney Barrett. The change on the highest court is fueling speculation about whether it could strike down Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court case that protected abortion as a constitutional right.
Colorado is among the states with the least restrictive abortion access in the nation — one of seven that does not prohibit abortion at any point during pregnancy. Women travel from other states and countries each year to get abortions in Colorado. There were from 200 to 300 abortions after 22 weeks of pregnancy in each of the past few years, according to the state health department.
“Today is a victory for every person who has ever been shamed or stigmatized for having an abortion,” said Dusti Gurule, executive director of the Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and Reproductive Rights. “It’s a victory for every person who has been denied an abortion in their home state and had to travel thousands of miles for the medical care they needed.”
Proposition 115 would have outlawed abortion after 22 weeks gestation and made it a misdemeanor for doctors who violated the ban. It allowed for one exception: “when the abortion is immediately required to save the life of the pregnant woman.” It did not have exceptions for rape, incest, the mother’s health or a diagnosis that the baby would not survive.
Supporters of the ban said it was time for Colorado to end “birthday abortions,” meaning that women can get abortions right up to their due date in this state. Opponents, though, say that doesn’t happen, and that women who seek abortions after 22 weeks typically do so because their own health problems — including preeclampsia or lung or heart conditions — worsen later in pregnancy, or they find out about a lethal fetal diagnosis at their 20-week ultrasound.
Nationally, the vast majority of abortions, about 89%, happen during the first trimester, while about 1% occur after 21 weeks, according to research by the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion access.
While the majority of Americans support the right to abortion, most also believe there should be at least some restrictions. A Gallup poll in May found that 50% of people think abortion should be legal only under certain circumstances, while 29% say it should be legal under all circumstances and 20% say it should never be legal.
A 2018 Gallup poll found that about half of Americans believed third-trimester abortions should be legal in cases of rape, incest or a fetal diagnosis that meant the baby would not survive.
The number of abortions in Colorado has been declining for decades. There were 9,002 abortions in Colorado in 2019, down from 11,201 in 2010 and 17,855 in 1984, according to the state health department.
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