Push For Taxpayer-Funded Abortion Until Birth Makes MT Ballot
In Montana, Republican Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen certified a ballot measure that will be voted on November 5, aiming to amend the state constitution to explicitly secure the right to make decisions regarding pregnancy, including the right to an abortion. Currently, Montana restricts abortions after “fetal viability,” defined as starting at 24 weeks of gestation. If approved, the measure would prevent the legislature from enacting laws that restrict abortion access prior to this cutoff and would shield abortion providers from legal accountability for possible misconduct related to late-term procedures.
The initiative, labeled CI-128, asserts that it prohibits penalties for patients, healthcare providers, and others involved in assisting individuals in exercising their reproductive rights. Critics argue that the vague language in the amendment could allow for an interpretation that permits abortions at any stage of pregnancy if deemed ”medically necessary” by a healthcare professional. This addition to Montana’s already permissive abortion laws raises concerns about potential taxpayer funding for all-trimester abortions under Medicaid.
The proposal was mainly introduced by abortion rights advocates in response to conservative legislation passed by the Republican-controlled state government, including laws aimed at restricting taxpayer-funded abortions and providing protections for infants born alive after failed abortions. The measure faced initial challenges from the state’s attorney general, who argued it violated the state’s constitutional rules by combining multiple political issues into one initiative. However, it was ultimately approved for the ballot, positioning it as a significant legislative issue for the upcoming election.
Montana’s Republican Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen certified a ballot measure on Tuesday night that will ask voters on Nov. 5 to amend their state constitution to “expressly provide a right to make and carry out decisions about one’s own pregnancy, including the right to abortion.”
Montana law currently prohibits abortion beyond “fetal viability,” which the state defines as beginning at 24 weeks gestation. The ballot measure if passed, however, would effectively ban the GOP legislature from passing any laws that limit abortion before that cutoff. It would also keep the government from holding abortionists accountable for misconduct like ending life in the womb late in pregnancy.
“CI-128 prevents the government from penalizing patients, healthcare providers, or anyone who assists someone in exercising their right to make and carry out voluntary decisions about their pregnancy,” the amendment states.
The proposal doesn’t simply ostracize the 55 percent of Americans who think ending life in the womb beyond the start of the second trimester, around 14 weeks gestation, should be “generally illegal.” It also uses vague language to deliberately prohibit the state from interfering with abortions at any point in pregnancy as long as a “healthcare professional determines it is medically indicated to protect the pregnant patient’s life or health.”
This sweeping modification to the state’s already radical permissions means practically any abortion could be construed to meet the “medically necessary” qualifier required for taxpayer funding under Montana’s Medicaid program.
“Montana allows abortion until a baby reaches viability and that apparently isn’t enough for the abortion industry and their political allies. Through this amendment, they are attempting to enshrine all-trimester abortion in the constitution for babies who could survive outside of the womb and force the taxpayers to fund it,” State Public Affairs Director Kelsey Pritchard said in a statement.
Abortion activists debuted the measure in November 2023 in an effort to punish Montana’s Republican-controlled legislature and GOP Gov. Greg Gianforte for passing several pro-life laws, including limitations on taxpayer-funded abortion and protections for babies born alive after botched abortions.
To make the November 2024 ballot, the measure had to pass muster with Montana’s Legislative Services Division, as well as the state’s GOP attorney general and secretary of state. Republican Attorney General Austin Knudsen attempted to invalidate the measure under Article XIV, Section 11 of the Montana constitution because he said it “logrolls multiple distinct political choices into a single initiative.”
The state Supreme Court, which decided this week to strike down a law requiring underage girls seeking abortions to obtain parental consent, overruled his findings, rewrote the language, and declared the measure did not qualify for an approval vote from a legislative committee as state statute required.
Montana’s GOP Senate President Jason Ellsworth claimed the court’s decision effectively “cuts the Legislature out of the process of reviewing this proposed initiative” but was ultimately unsuccessful at securing legislative review.
Official approval of the Montana amendment no doubt advances Democrats’ national abortion agenda by putting the party’s extremism on the ballot in at least eight states. It will also, as Axios noted, “boost the re-election bid of embattled Sen. Jon Tester.”
Jordan Boyd is a staff writer at The Federalist and producer of The Federalist Radio Hour. Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire, Fox News, and RealClearPolitics. Jordan graduated from Baylor University where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on X @jordanboydtx.
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