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Idaho abortion measure to appear on ballot in November, pro-lifers warn

The initiative would challenge Idaho’s near-total abortion ban by allowing abortions until fetal viability and afterward in medical emergencies. Pro-life groups are warning that the initiative would dismantle the state’s Defense of Life Act, which has saved nearly 6,000 unborn children from abortion since it was enacted in 2022.

Elise Winland
Elise Winland
· 2 min read
Idaho abortion measure to appear on ballot in November, pro-lifers warn
Founder and CEO of Stanton Healthcare Brandi Swindell speaks outside the Supreme Court on April 24, 2024, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

An abortion-related initiative on Idaho’s November ballot could dismantle the state’s protections for unborn children and allow abortion after fetal viability in some circumstances, pro-life advocates warn. 

The measure, known as the Reproductive Freedom and Privacy Act, would establish a broad “right” to reproductive freedom and identify abortion and contraception as private reproductive decisions. If passed, the initiative would allow abortions up to fetal viability — generally considered to be around 24 weeks gestation — and after viability in medical emergencies. 

Supporters of the abortion measure submitted about 110,000 signatures to qualify the initiative for the Nov. 3 ballot, according to Boise State Public Radio, an NPR affiliate. Idaho initiatives require signatures from 6% of eligible voters, about 70,000 for this election. 

Pro-life advocates opposed to the measure argue that it would permit abortions throughout all nine months of pregnancy in many circumstances and nullify Idaho’s Defense of Life Act, which establishes protections for both mothers and their unborn children. 

The state’s Defense of Life Act, which took effect in August 2022, prohibits most abortions and has saved nearly 6,000 unborn children, according to a press release from Stanton Public Policy Center. The organization is affiliated with Stanton Healthcare, an Idaho-based network of nonprofit women’s medical clinics that provide alternatives to abortion. 

According to the policy center, no women have been arrested following miscarriages, no doctors have been prosecuted under the act for providing legitimate medical care, and no maternal deaths have been attributed to the restrictions since the law took effect, countering predictions abortion supporters made about the law’s impact.

Brandi Swindell, founder and CEO of Stanton Healthcare and Stanton Public Policy Center, said in the release that the law has protected women from coercion and provided a foundation for compassionate, life-affirming care. 

“Every woman deserves compassionate healthcare, truthful information, meaningful support, and the freedom to welcome her child without the fear, pressure, or violence of abortion,” Swindell said. “Idaho has demonstrated that we can protect both women and their children, and we should continue building a culture where every mother is surrounded with hope, practical resources, and life-affirming care.”

The policy center said it plans to mobilize local church communities and pastors to defeat the abortion initiative at the polls, arguing that Idaho must not “return back to the dark days of abortion violence against children and abortion abuse against women.”

Idaho is among several states that will have abortion-related ballot measures in November elections. As Zeale News previously reported, voters in Nevada and Virginia will also decide on pro-abortion amendments in November, while voters in Missouri will consider a pro-life measure that would repeal portions of the state’s 2024 abortion amendment. A proposed Colorado measure seeking to repeal the state constitution’s “right to abortion” has not yet qualified for the ballot.

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