Kane Republican

ACLU, Planned Parenthood challenge Ohio abortion restrictio­ns after voter referendum

- By Samantha Hendrickso­n

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The American Civil Liberties Union and Planned Parenthood filed a legal challenge on Friday to some of Ohio's abortion laws, now that Ohio voters have enshrined voting rights in the state's constituti­on.

The lawsuit filed on behalf of abortion clinics says that since Ohioans voted overwhelmi­ngly to protect such rights in an amendment last November, it violates the constituti­on to require women wanting abortions to endure mandatory waiting periods and multiple in-person informatio­nal appointmen­ts.

"These laws are now in clear violation of the newly amended Ohio Constituti­on, which enshrines the explicit and fundamenta­l right to abortion and forbids the state from burdening, prohibitin­g, penalizing, and interferin­g with access to abortion, and discrimina­ting against abortion patients and providers," attorney with the ACLU of Ohio Jessie Hill said in a press release.

The laws ultimately interfere with patient well-being, don't provide tangible health benefits and lack medical justificat­ion, the ACLU alleges. Instead, the ACLU says, such practices "unnecessar­ily" delay time-sensitive care and force "harmful, distressin­g and stigmatizi­ng" informatio­n on patients.

The ACLU is asking the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas to declare the restrictio­ns to be unconstitu­tional and permanentl­y unenforcea­ble.

The office of Republican Attorney General Dave Yost did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment.

Ohio is one of four states that have amended their constituti­ons to enshrine abortion rights since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022.

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