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In Many States, Voters Reject Anti-Choice Ballot Initiatives

by: Emily Douglas  |  RH Reality Check

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Students gather at the University of California at Santa Barbara to protest California propositions 4 and 8. (Photo: Shannon Switzer)

    In state after state today, voters rejected the opportunity to put the government squarely between individual Americans and their own private life decisions on issues at the beginning and end of life. In South Dakota and California voters affirmed the rights of women and teens to make their own health care decisions. In Colorado voters rejected the notion that fertilized eggs should have individual human rights. In Washington state, voters extended the right to make end-of-life decisions to those struggling with terminal illnesses. In Michigan, a ballot measure to permit funding for embryonic stem cell research was approved by voters.

    South Dakota's ban would have outright banned abortion with nominal exceptions for rape, incest, and women's health, the second time South Dakotans have voted on a sweeping abortion ban. Again, the state voted it down, this time 55 to 45 percent. Coloradans overwhelmingly rejected, 74 to 26 percent, perhaps the most radical of the initiatives, one which would have extended rights of legal personhood to fertilized eggs, paving the way for a total ban on abortion, in-vitro fertilization, hormonal birth control, and having far-reaching and, by many accounts poorly-considered, medical and legal implications. "This rejection by voters of Amendment 48 sends a clear message: personal, private health care decisions should be made by women, their doctors, and their families, not by politicians," said PPFA President Cecile Richards in a statement. "We need government policies that improve access to health care, not take it away."

    In Washington, voters overwhelmingly passed a Death with Dignity initiative to permit those struggling with terminal illnesses to make their own end-of-life decisions - with 54 percent of precinct reporting, the measure was favored 59 to 41 percent. Washington's law is based on Oregon's successful Death with Dignity law, one that has been in effect for more than a decade and was upheld by the US Supreme Court in 2006.

    The California initiative, defeated for the third time, would have required teens to inform their parents before having an abortion, unless the teen was willing to accuse her parents of abuse. Voters rejected that notion 53 to 47 percent, with 91 percent of precincts reporting. In Michigan, expanded possibilities for medical research on embryonic stem cells, giving hope to those suffering from chronic illness and injuries; passing the measure 52 to 48 percent.

    When the electorate rejects threats to women's health, why do anti-choice groups keep coming back for more? Polls taken after an absolute ban on abortion lost decisively in the state in 2006 suggested South Dakotans might be more amenable to less sweeping abortion ban. So anti-choicers added so-called exceptions for rape, incest, and women's health - but voters didn't fall for it this time around, either. Meanwhile, two wealthy Californians have been behind all three parental notification initiatives. "Apparently, [San Diego publisher James Holman and Sonoma winemaker Don Sebastiani] will continue pouring money into anti-abortion initiatives despite repeated messages from Californians that we wish to protect our privacy and our teenagers' health," writes Maya Manian, reporting that by June 30 they had put up $2 million of the $2.3 million spent in support of Proposition 4.

    Ballot measures sink millions into electoral battles when that money is desperately needed for prevention education, family planning or health care - issues we can all agree on. Yes for Life in South Dakota was attempting to ban abortion in a state that where abortion access is limited to one physician who flies in each week to provide abortion care. We now have a pro-choice, pro-prevention, pro-education President who wants to work with those who oppose abortion rights to reduce the rate of unintended pregnancies and ensure reproductive justice and the right to parent with dignity for all women. Will anti-choice groups join us in the common ground?

  

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Government does not own us

Government does not own us body and soul. I am reminded of the Puritans of Colonial times. There is a a gawd-awful confusion of church and state involved in today's controversies. Over-population, the base of all of earth's problems, remains unchecked amidst all of the wrangling over amongst individual egos and beliefs.

yup, far as I am concerned,

yup, far as I am concerned, take the religious agenda out of government-decision-making and we're all the better off for it in a democratic and industrialized civilization. unless of course you want to go backwards to the dark ages where the church dictated how you should do anything and their dictates were backed by the royal houses that ordered all their militaries to shove their un-secular laws down all of your throats.

I voted against the "Death

I voted against the "Death with Dignity" initiative here in Washington, and I'm disappointed that it passed. I'm certainly not opposed to the principle but this version puts all competency decisions in the hands of the doctor, with no review or even any requirements for notification of anyone outside the hospital. It might be better named the "Harold Shipman initiative"! I would have voted for an initiative that required judicial or administrative review of the patients competency to make such a decision (not of the decision itself); that wouldn't be government interference but government protection, just what government is supposed to do.

All anti-Choice voting

All anti-Choice voting initiatives should be bundled with the proposition that Viagra can only be dispensed to married males of child-bearing years, and only used for procreation. Each pill to be individually dispensed by the government and the results accounted for. That might put an end to the efforts of those who would try to control women by invading their private lives. If their goal is fewer abortions, start with sex education in schools. However, sex education is suppressed because eliminating abortions is not their true goal.

What kind of numnut would

What kind of numnut would extend civil rights to a fetus? Probably the same dodos who extend them to corporations. What's next? Masturbation as child abandonment?