Reproductive Freedom Defense Act | |
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Connecticut General Assembly | |
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Citation | PL 22-19 |
Territorial extent | U.S. state of Connecticut |
Passed by | Connecticut House of Representatives |
Passed | April 19, 2022 |
Passed by | Connecticut State Senate |
Passed | April 29, 2022 |
Signed by | Gov. Ned Lamont |
Signed | May 5, 2022 |
Effective | July 1, 2022 |
Legislative history | |
First chamber: Connecticut House of Representatives | |
Bill title | HB 5414 |
Bill citation | |
Introduced by | Reps. Matt Blumenthal and Jillian Gilchrest |
Introduced | March 9, 2022 |
Status: In force |
House Bill 5414, passed by the Connecticut General Assembly and signed into law by that U.S. state's Governor, Ned Lamont, on May 5, 2022, as the Reproductive Freedom Defense Act, [1] [2] is intended to protect abortion in the state and expand the procedure's availability. Several of its provisions are responses to the Texas Heartbeat Act, [3] passed in late 2021 and since emulated by two other states, that would prevent enforcement in Connecticut of judgements obtained by lawsuits filed under those laws against abortion providers, patients and those who facilitate them. [4] It also allows more non-physician providers to perform certain types of abortions, codifying a past legal opinion. [5] The law took effect July 1. [6]
The bill was introduced in March by Rep. Matt Blumenthal, a member of the state House from the Democratic Party, which strongly supports abortion rights nationally and enjoys a trifecta in Connecticut, with majority control of both houses of the legislature and the governor's office. Five weeks later it was passed by the House with support from most Democrats and some members of the Republican minority; the state Senate followed 10 days later. In both chambers' debates some Black female Democratic members voted in opposition; while they knew the bill would pass, they spoke of their frustration with the lack of any birth control options for young women in their communities besides abortion and the unsavory past they associated with the procedure. Lamont had promised he would sign the bill; during the week after its passage, a draft majority opinion in the U.S. Supreme Court's then pending Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization , which as it did when handed down at the end of June overturned Roe v. Wade , its 1973 decision striking down most state abortion laws, was leaked and published, giving the bill greater urgency for its supporters.
Anti-abortion legislators in Texas, where Roe had originally been filed, and other states had been trying for several years to pass "heartbeat" bills that would ban all abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, usually within six weeks of conception. [7] This conflicts with Planned Parenthood v. Casey , [8] a successor case to Roe, which had held that the state can regulate abortion prior to viability, roughly twice that time, only to the extent necessary to protect the health of the patient, [9] and accordingly federal courts have barred enforcement of those laws. [7]
In March 2021, Texas's Senate Bill 8, another heartbeat bill, allowing no exceptions even for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, [10] was introduced [11] with provisions designed to prevent pre-enforcement injunctions: it allowed enforcement only through private lawsuits by private citizens who were not government employees. Since only state officials can be sued to prevent enforcement of an allegedly unconstitutional law, its supporters expected it to survive a facial court challenge. [12]
In May of that year it passed both houses of the legislature and was signed into law by governor Greg Abbott as the Texas Heartbeat Act. On September 1 it went into effect. [11] Lawsuits were filed in state and federal court to block it. The former resulted in a December ruling that held portions of the bill in violation of the Texas Constitution but declined to enjoin its enforcement. [13]
The federal action, Whole Women's Health v. Jackson , sought to block enforcement before its effective date by naming several court clerks and judges as defendants on the grounds that, as state officials, they would play a role in enforcing the law. The motion for a preliminary injunction reached the U.S. Supreme Court, which held that the plaintiffs lacked standing as no actual suit against an abortion provider had yet been brought. [14] On remand to the Fifth Circuit of Appeals, the Texas Supreme Court was asked to certify whether state medical licensing officials could be named as defendants since they might have the power to enforce sanctions against providers accused of violating the law. It said the law prohibited those officials from doing so, and without any defendants, the suit had to be dismissed. [10] [lower-alpha 1]
Connecticut has been a national leader in both restricting and permitting abortion, dating to colonial times. In 1742 a Pomfret woman named Sarah Grosvenor died from the complications of a surgical abortion. John Hallowell, the physician believed to have performed it, and Amasa Sessions, the suitor who had allegedly impregnated her, were tried under common law for causing her death; Hallowell was convicted of a misdemeanor and Sessions acquitted of all charges. It was the first known criminal prosecution of a physician over an abortion in British America. [16] [17] Connecticut also became the first state to criminalize abortion in its statutes in 1821, when it made it illegal for pharmacists to sell mixtures designed to induce abortions after the fourth month of a pregnancy. [18]
The Supreme Court's 1965 Griswold v. Connecticut decision, striking down the state's prohibition on the sale or use of contraceptives, laid the legal foundation for Roe through its recognition of an implied constitutional right to privacy. [19] In Connecticut a large group of women filed suit in federal court for the District of Connecticut to block enforcement of the state's abortion law, which allowed the procedure only when the life of the patient was in danger. The court ruled in their favor in 1972, and after the General Assembly amended the statute to include a preamble stating its purpose in preserving life, it found that insufficient when it reviewed the statute a second time later that year, holding that a fetus is not a person within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. [20] [21]
Roe made any appeal moot, and in the years afterwards a postmortem 1964 photograph of Gerri Santoro, a Coventry woman who died in a Norwich motel after her boyfriend attempted to perform a surgical abortion on her, became a rallying image for the national abortion rights movement. [22] In 1990, Gov. William O'Neill, despite his personal opposition to abortion as a Catholic, signed into law a bill that had passed the General Assembly overwhelmingly, repealing Connecticut's older statutes criminalizing abortion and declaring that, prior to viability, the decision about the abortion was entirely the woman's. This ensured that even were Roe to be overturned, abortion would remain legal in Connecticut under its terms. [23]
In the late 20th century Connecticut voters began to be seen as strongly supportive of abortion rights across party lines as the Democratic Party dominated state politics. Thomas Meskill, governor during the 1972 federal lawsuit, was the last executive to actively oppose abortion rights. The next Republican to win that post, John Rowland, supported abortion rights in office after having been opposed to them as a member of the U.S. House. [24]
In early 2021, Connecticut Reps. Matt Blumenthal, of the state House's 147th district in the Fairfield County towns of Darien and Stamford, also son of the state's senior U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, [25] and Jillian Gilchrest from the 18th district in West Hartford, also formerly the executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Connecticut, formed the House's Reproductive Freedom Caucus out of concern that the U.S. Supreme Court's disinterest in reviewing the Texas law, and some of the justices' questions and statements during oral argument in Dobbs, indicated that Roe's overturn was imminent. [6] At a news conference held in late January by the caucus, activists, and other legislators including House Speaker Matthew Ritter, to mark the decision's 49th anniversary, Blumenthal noted that although Connecticut had long ago codified the terms of Roe into state law, "there is much more work to do to expand access to reproductive healthcare and protect our residents from other states' extreme laws. There is no time to waste: we must act now." He and Gilchrest indicated that, in consultation with the caucus, they would seek legislation that would expand access to abortion in the state, including greater Medicaid reimbursements for the procedure, allowing telehealth coverage and "policies to protect persons and practitioners and anyone seeking abortion care in Connecticut." [26]
In the wake of the law's passage, abortion seekers went to clinics in other states, including those that do not border Texas. [27] [lower-alpha 2] It was unclear whether it permitted suits against providers in other states who perform or oversee an abortion on a Texas patient, whether in person or remotely. [4] A state legislator in Missouri introduced a bill that would specifically allow suits against providers in other states who perform abortions on Missouri women. [28]
Blumenthal and Gilchrest introduced a bill in early March to address those concerns, based in part [29] on a draft Columbia Law Review article exploring the possible extraterritoriality issues that would arise in the wake of Roe''s overturn, and how states wishing to continue providing legal abortion could exploit them to do so. [30] It was given the number 5414 and referred to the General Assembly's Judiciary Committee. [31] [lower-alpha 3] A week later, Idaho's legislature passed a law similar to Texas's and sent it to governor Brad Little for his signature. [33] [lower-alpha 4] Neighboring Washington responded with a law forbidding the state from prosecuting anyone involved in an abortion, with the intent of allowing Idaho abortion seekers to avail themselves of the procedure in Washington. [35]
As passed, HB 5414, seven pages long, amends [36] the sections of the Connecticut General Statutes related to criminal procedure, [37] evidence, particularly privileged communications and confidentiality requirements, [38] and the state's public health law governing abortion. [39]
After defining "reproductive health care services" and "person" for the purposes of the bill, the latter including associations, corporations and partnerships, it: [36]
At the end of March the committee reported it out favorably by a 24–14 vote, dividing along party lines, with one member absent. [42] It was filed with the legislative commissioner's office for legal and fiscal analysis, then put on the House calendar April 14. [31] Five days later, it was combined through an amendment on a 93–54 vote largely along party lines with a separate bill that allowed nonphysicians to perform certain types of abortions, and passed by an 87–60 vote. Seven Republicans, mostly women, including Laura Devlin, the party's likely candidate for lieutenant governor in that year's election, voted for passage while 14 Democrats opposed it; [3] Four members were absent. [43]
The Democrats who opposed the bill were largely from the state's Black and Puerto Rican communities. One, Rep. Treneé McGee of West Haven, who had taken her seat six months earlier in a special election where she had run on a "consistent life ethic", opposed to not only abortion but the death penalty and euthanasia, [44] said she knew the bill would pass but had to speak against it anyway, having been the only Democrat to vote against the amendment combining the two bills. "I want to speak to the history of this industry and why I think it's destructive to my community", she said, noting that Black women account for a share of abortions performed that is more than twice their percentage of the overall population. She believed too many Black women had come to consider abortion the only form of birth control and that her community had more pressing needs than abortion access. [3]
A Democrat who voted for the bill, Rep. Aimee Berger-Girvalo of Ridgefield, recalled her own abortion at 18. She had made the decision with her boyfriend, who later became father to her children, crossing "a barrier of protestors yelling and grabbing at me" to get in to the clinic. "I have never once regretted my choice", she said. Berger-Girvalo recalled the experience by way of supporting the provision that expanded those who could perform abortions, saying she would have been a lot more comfortable in that situation dealing with the APRN who gave her annual exams at the time instead of strangers. [3] [45]
Some Republicans who voted against the bill said that while they supported the legal protections against lawsuits from Texas, they were opposed to the provisions allowing nonphysicians to perform some nonsurgical abortions. "We can all agree that we want abortions to be legal, safe and rare," said Rep. Kimberly Fiorello of Greenwich. "And I believe that this bill is going in the opposite direction." Rep. Vincent Candelora of North Branford, the House minority leader, expressed doubts about the bill's constitutionality. "It's creating a cause of action for anyone to come into Connecticut, to bring third-party lawsuits for judgments that might have been held against them in other states", he said during floor debate on the bill. "[T]hat sort of impacts the notion that states are allowed to govern themselves." Blumenthal said later that clarifying language added during the debate had sufficiently addressed that concern. [3]
At a news conference that morning, Governor Ned Lamont announced he would sign the bill if the General Assembly passed it, likening the Texas law to "vigilante justice". He was flanked by two activists on the issue, Amanda Skinner, president of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England, and Janée Woods Webber, executive director of the Connecticut Women's Education and Legal Fund, who said "we will never achieve gender equity or economic equity without full reproductive freedom." Skinner praised the services-expansion provision as it would shorten a two-week waiting period for first-trimester abortions in the state. [3]
Ten days later, on April 29, the Senate brought the bill to a vote. Debate opened that evening and ended shortly before midnight with the bill passing, 25–9. As in the House, while Democrats predominantly supported the bill and Republicans opposed it, there were exceptions on both sides. Two Republicans were absent. [46] [47]
Again, Democratic opposition came from Black women representing the state's larger cities. As Rep. McGee had, Sen. Patricia Billie Miller of Stamford talked of abortions being forced on enslaved and Native women in the past: "There's no way that I can accept a system that would intentionally take a baby from a mother", she said. She also noted that in discussions of the state's juvenile justice system, it was noted that the human brain is not fully developed until the age of 25. Yet the state allowed teenagers to have abortions without their parents' consent or knowledge. Citing friends who had had abortions at that age which still bothered them, she said "I will not stand here and support a system that was designed to take advantage of people who didn't know any better." [47]
Miller agreed it was ultimately a woman's choice since it was her body, but reminded her colleagues, as McGee had, that women in her community needed support in all reproductive choices and many of them terminated pregnancies only because they believed they had no other options. Another senator, Marilyn Moore of Bridgeport, who had worked at Planned Parenthood for eight years, castigated that organization for some of its past associations with racism and said it had to do better in its relationship with the Black community. "People talk about why Black people don't want to get vaccinated because we've had medical apartheid ... Right now, I'm not feeling good about this bill." Sen. Douglas McCrory of the city of Hartford, the state capitol, supported the bill and abortion rights but agreed that McGee's remarks in the House had "pulled the scab off something." [47]
Some Republicans supported the bill. "It is somewhat outrageous that another state thinks it can come into our state and sue clinicians", said Heather Somers of Groton. [47]
Following the bill's passage, it was certified and prepared for Lamont's signature by the offices of the legislative commissioner and the Secretary of State. [31] Two days later, a leaked draft of the Dobbs opinion suggesting the Court would indeed overrule Roe and return abortion regulation to the states circulated, greatly alarming abortion-rights activists. Lamont alluded to this when he signed the bill on video in his office, without any ceremony, May 5. "This is a bill I wanted to sign as soon as possible", he said. Senate president pro tempore Martin Looney of New Haven called the bill a "defense of our own values and our own legal system." [48]
"Connecticut is on the right side of history in defending her rights" the Connecticut Post editorialized. [24] Before the bill passed, Slate called it "the gold standard for pro-choice legislation in the post-Roe era" and likened its no-extradition clause to measures taken by Northern states to frustrate the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act before the Civil War. [4] "[T]his law will add a much-needed protection for patients", wrote The Progressive . [49]
Peter Wolfgang of the Family Institute of Connecticut, a conservative religious organization, was encouraged despite the bill's passage. "[T]he debate over HB 5414 ... has exposed cracks in the abortion industry's political support in Connecticut" he told the Hartford Courant . "They won the bill. Pro-lifers won the argument." [1] The Charlotte Lozier Institute, an anti-abortion think tank associated with the Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America political action committee, said Connecticut was "encourag[ing] abortion tourism on an unprecedented level." [50]
David Cohen, a professor at Drexel University's Thomas R. Kline School of Law whose research had been drawn on to write the bill, said that although California and Washington had previously enacted some aspects of HB 5414, Connecticut's bill went further than either in its specific protections for providers. [51] It was also the first bill to combine all those protections in a single bill. "It's definitely going to have a ripple effect," said Pitt law professor Greer Donley, who had worked with Cohen. [29]
After the bill's passage, Bob Stefanowski, the Republican candidate to run against Lamont in that year's election, [lower-alpha 9] had no immediate comment beyond an assurance that abortion would always be a protected right in the state in response to the leaked Dobbs opinion. Sen. Heather Somers, a Republican from Groton who had voted for the bill, noted that Stefanowski's running mate, Rep. Laura Devlin, had also voted in support and expressed concern that "[t]his is definitely going to be a campaign issue" since Stefanowski would be asked whether he would have signed it. [5]
"I think that any candidate for governor has got to speak up and let us know where you stand", said Lamont as he signed the bill again at a May 10 ceremony on the capitol steps. "What have I heard from [Stefanowski]? Crickets." His lieutenant governor, Susan Bysiewicz, raised the same doubts. "It's one thing to support the current law", she said. "It's another thing to step forward and say if a bill should come to your desk, that you will veto it, and you will fight any attempts to weaken our law, because those happen every year." [5]
One General Assembly race was affected by the vote on the bill. In Greenwich, Trevor Crow, a Democrat who had lost her 2021 race for the position of the town's tax collector, announced before Lamont had signed the bill that she would be challenging Ryan Fazio, the incumbent Republican state senator for the 36th district, which includes all of Greenwich as well as portions of neighboring Stamford and New Canaan. Fazio had been elected in a special election eight months earlier after his predecessor, Alexandra Kasser, the first Democrat to win that seat in almost 90 years, [53] resigned early in her second term to focus on her contentious divorce. [54]
While Crow cited several issues with Fazio as her reasons for running against him, she emphasized his vote against HB 5414. "Just last week, my opponent cast a vote that attacks reproductive rights by endangering health care providers", she said. "That's the kind of extremism that Connecticut voters won't tolerate." Fazio called that statement "misleading", noting that his vote was not meant to show support for recriminalizing abortion in Connecticut, nor did he expect that to happen. Instead, he expressed concern over the service-expansion provisions, saying that the bill "undermine[d] women's health and safety by lowering the safety standards for who can conduct surgical abortions in Connecticut." [53] [lower-alpha 10]
The day after Lamont signed HB 5414, District of Columbia councilwoman Brianne Nadeau, chair of its Human Services Committee, introduced the Human Rights Sanctuary Amendments Act of 2022 along with nine other sponsors. "The bill is modeled, in part, on Connecticut's recently passed Reproductive Freedom Defense Act", she wrote. It, too, provided for countersuits by any District (D.C.) residents sued in another state for their role in providing abortions within the district, but also specifically mentioned providing or using contraception, gender-affirming care [lower-alpha 11] and entering into or performing same-sex marriages, other targets or possible target of laws in Texas and other states, as covered activities. "It protects the rights of District residents to live with whom they please, love whom they love, and control their reproductive destinies." [55] Passage remained uncertain as in the wake of Roe's reversal some members of Congress have vowed to introduce legislation not only banning abortions in the district but ending the District's home rule should they get a majority of seats in that year's elections to the House of Representatives, although such efforts had in the past failed to overcome the Senate filibuster. [56]
In mid-June, the legislature of New York, Connecticut's southern and western neighbor, which had legalized abortion before Roe [57] and like Connecticut has codified that decision into its laws, [58] passed five bills intended to protect abortion rights, some of which included the same provisions as the Connecticut and D.C. laws: greater confidentiality between providers and patients, the specific inclusion of gender-affirming care, a prohibition on subpoenas related to foreign abortion prosecutions and extraditions of abortion providers unless they have fled to New York from other states as well as any law enforcement cooperation with such investigations. The New York laws, like HB 5414, allow countersuits by anyone sued elsewhere for providing or facilitating the provision of care legal in New York. In addition, they prohibit both disciplinary measures and adverse action by medical malpractice insurers related to providing the covered care. Kathy Hochul, the state's first female governor, signed them into law shortly afterwards; they took effect immediately. As in Connecticut, abortion opponents denounced the laws as promoting "abortion tourism". [59] [60]
Delaware passed its version, House Bill 455, at the end of the month, less than a week after Dobbs. [61] Rep. Melissa Minor-Brown had introduced it at the beginning of the month; it passed the state House within two weeks by a 24-13 vote on party lines [62] with four abstentions. [63] The state Senate took it up immediately afterwards and similarly passed it 15–6 two weeks later, with Republican Ernesto Lopez crossing party lines to support. [64] Governor John Carney signed it the day after passage. It includes many of the same provisions as HB 5414 and the New York legislation, going further to protect Delaware-based physicians, physician assistants, and APRNs from adverse disciplinary action over pre-viability abortions initiated by a state where the procedure remains legal. Those professionals will also be allowed to perform abortions in Delaware regardless of method. [61] [lower-alpha 12]
At the same time, Phil Murphy, governor of New Jersey, between Delaware and New York, signed two bills passed by the state legislature that enacted some of the same provisions. The first prohibits disclosure of patients' identities without their consent in any civil, probate, legislative or administrative proceeding; prohibits public agencies and employees from cooperating with any investigation by another state into the provision of reproductive health care services that are lawful in New Jersey; and prohibits the state's licensing boards from taking adverse action against any licensed professional based solely on their involvement in providing those services. The second bill has the same prohibition on extradition found in the other laws. [66]
A month later, legislators in another state bordering Connecticut, Massachusetts, passed its HB 5090, [67] described as "the most comprehensive yet" [30] : 34 of the "shield" laws like HB 5414. In addition to the provisions of the New York, Connecticut and Delaware laws, it provides that no physician, physician's assistant, advanced practice registered nurse, pharmacist, psychologist or social worker disciplined for, or convicted of charges related to, providing an abortion in another state, shall be barred from seeking the corresponding professional license in Massachusetts, nor shall the state include those actions on any records it makes available to the public. [68] It also requires state university health offices to develop plans to provide abortion medications within a year, insurers to cover the full cost of abortions without any cost-sharing requirement [67] except where doing so would violate federal law, and where an employer has a religious objection. [68] It also specifies the conditions under which third-trimester abortions may be performed and leaves the judgement to the physician, prohibiting any review by a medical committee. Governor Charlie Baker signed the bill into law the day after passage. [67]
This is a timeline of reproductive rights legislation, a chronological list of laws and legal decisions affecting human reproductive rights. Reproductive rights are a sub-set of human rights pertaining to issues of reproduction and reproductive health. These rights may include some or all of the following: the right to legal or safe abortion, the right to birth control, the right to access quality reproductive healthcare, and the right to education and access in order to make reproductive choices free from coercion, discrimination, and violence. Reproductive rights may also include the right to receive education about contraception and sexually transmitted infections, and freedom from coerced sterilization, abortion, and contraception, and protection from practices such as female genital mutilation (FGM).
The legality of abortion in the United States and the various restrictions imposed on the procedure vary significantly, depending on the laws of each state or other jurisdiction, although there is no uniform federal law. Some states prohibit abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with few exceptions; others permit it up to a certain point in a woman's pregnancy, while some allow abortion throughout a woman's pregnancy. In states where abortion is legal, several classes of restrictions on the procedure may exist, such as parental consent or notification laws, requirements that patients be shown an ultrasound before obtaining an abortion, mandatory waiting periods, and counseling requirements.
A six-week abortion ban, also called a "fetal heartbeat bill" by proponents, is a law in the United States which makes abortion illegal as early as six weeks gestational age, which is when proponents claim that a "fetal heartbeat" can be detected. Medical and reproductive health experts, including the American Medical Association and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, say that the reference to a fetal heartbeat is medically inaccurate and misleading, for a conceptus is not called a fetus until eight weeks after fertilization, as well as that at four weeks after fertilization, the embryo has no heart, only a group of cells which will become a heart. Medical professionals advise that a true fetal heartbeat cannot be detected until around 17 to 20 weeks of gestation when the chambers of the heart have become sufficiently developed.
Abortion in Oklahoma is illegal unless the abortion is necessary to save the life of a pregnant woman.
Abortion in Texas is illegal in most cases. There are nominally exceptions to save the mother's life, or prevent "substantial impairment of major bodily function", but the law on abortion in Texas is written in such an ambiguous way that life-threatening or harmful pregnancies do not explicitly constitute an exception. Attempts to clarify and codify these exceptions into law have been rejected by Republican lawmakers in Texas.
Jillian Marie Gilchrest is an American politician who is a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from the 18th district in Hartford County.
Matthew S. Blumenthal is an American politician and attorney serving as a member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from the 147th district in Fairfield County.
The Reproductive Health Act is a New York statute enacted on January 22, 2019, that protects abortion rights, decriminalized abortion, and eliminated several restrictions on voluntary abortions in the state. The RHA repealed §4164 of the state Public Health Law. The law has received national media attention.
Abortion in Louisiana is illegal as of August 1, 2022.
As of 2022, abortion in Missouri is illegal, with abortions only being legal in cases of medical emergency and several additional laws making access to abortion services difficult. In 2014, a poll by the Pew Research Center found that 45% of Missouri adults said that abortion should be legal vs. 50% that believe it should be illegal in all or most cases and 5% that do not know. According to a 2014 Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) study, 51% of white women in the state believed that abortion is legal in all or most cases.
Abortion in Connecticut is legal up to the point of fetal viability, or after that if necessary to preserve the life or health of the pregnant individual. A poll by the Pew Research Center found that 67 percent of adults in the state believed that abortion should be legal in all or most cases.
Abortion in Kansas is legal. Kansas law allows for an abortion up to 20 weeks post-fertilization. After that point, only in cases of life or severely compromised physical health may an abortion be performed, with this limit set on the belief that a fetus can feel pain after that point in the pregnancy. In July 2024, the Kansas Supreme Court struck down two abortion restrictions.
Abortion is illegal in Kentucky. There were laws in Kentucky about abortion by 1900, including ones with therapeutic exceptions. In 1998, the state passed legislation that required clinics to have an abortion clinic license if they wanted to operate. By the early 2010s, members of the Kentucky Legislature attempted to ban abortion in almost all cases and had also introduced the early abortion bans. Prior to 2019, Kentucky law prohibited abortions after week 22. This changed when the state legislature passed a law that moved the prohibition to week 6 in the early part of the year. A bill passed and made effective in April 2022 lowered the threshold to 15 weeks, the second most restrictive limit in effect in the United States behind Texas, and introduced regulations that made abortion illegal until it was blocked in federal court.
Abortion in Ohio is legal up to the point of fetal viability as a result of abortion rights being placed into the Ohio State Constitution by November 2023 Ohio Issue 1.
Abortion in Tennessee is illegal from fertilization and provides no exceptions for rape, incest or the health of the pregnant individual. Tennessee's abortion legislation provides no explicit exceptions for the pregnant patient’s health. It makes an exception for an “affirmative defense” for emergencies, but the vagueness of what constitutes an emergency means that physicians hesitate to provide abortions even when the pregnant individual's life is in jeopardy. Attempts to codify the exceptions into law have been rejected by Republican politicians in Tennesse. Tennessee is among the four states which forbid abortion access through their state constitution; alongside Alabama, Louisiana, and West Virginia.
Abortion in Maryland is legal at all stages of pregnancy. The first laws regulating abortion in the state were passed in 1867 and 1868, banning abortion except by a physician to "secure the safety of the mother." Abortion providers continued to operate both within and outside of the law. Legal enforcement became more strict from the 1940s through 60s, with numerous police raids on abortion providers. In 1968, Maryland passed a liberalized abortion law that clarified the wording of the previous law, allowing abortion in hospital settings in cases of rape, severe fetal deformity, or when life and health were endangered.
Abortion in Florida is generally illegal after six weeks from the woman's last menstrual period, This law came into effect in May 2024, being approved by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis following its passage in the Florida House of Representatives and the Florida Senate, with only Republican state legislators supporting and only Democratic state legislators opposing. Additionally, pregnant women are generally required to make two visits to a medical facility 24 hours apart to be able to obtain an abortion, in a law approved by Republican Governor Rick Scott in 2015.
Abortion in Wyoming is currently legal due to a temporary court injunction.
Patricia Billie Miller is an American politician serving as a member of the Connecticut State Senate from the 27th district. Miller was elected in a special election following the resignation of Carlo Leone. Previously, served in the Connecticut House of Representatives from the 145th district. Miller is the first woman and person of color to represent Stamford in either chamber of the legislature. She is a member of the Democratic Party.
The Texas Heartbeat Act, Senate Bill 8, is an act of the Texas Legislature that bans abortion after the detection of embryonic or fetal cardiac activity, which normally occurs after about six weeks of pregnancy. The law took effect on September 1, 2021, after the U.S. Supreme Court denied a request for emergency relief from Texas abortion providers. It was the first time a state has successfully imposed a six-week abortion ban since Roe v. Wade, and the first abortion restriction to rely solely on enforcement by private individuals through civil lawsuits, rather than having state officials enforce the law with criminal or civil penalties. The act authorizes members of the public to sue anyone who performs or facilitates an illegal abortion for a minimum of $10,000 in statutory damages per abortion, plus court costs and attorneys' fees.