Current:Home > InvestAbortion rights supporters report having enough signatures to qualify for Montana ballot -Secure Horizon Growth
Abortion rights supporters report having enough signatures to qualify for Montana ballot
View
Date:2025-04-12 08:14:44
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — An initiative to ask voters if they want to protect the right to a pre-viability abortion in Montana’s constitution has enough signatures to appear on the November ballot, supporters said Friday.
County election officials have verified 74,186 voter signatures, more than the 60,359 needed for the constitutional initiative to go before voters. It has also met the threshold of 10% of voters in 51 House Districts — more than the required 40 districts, Montanans Securing Reproductive Rights said.
“We’re excited to have met the valid signature threshold and the House District threshold required to qualify this critical initiative for the ballot,” Kiersten Iwai, executive director of Forward Montana and spokesperson for Montanans Securing Reproductive Rights said in a statement.
Still pending is whether the signatures of inactive voters should count toward the total.
Montana’s secretary of state said they shouldn’t, but it didn’t make that statement until after the signatures were gathered and after some counties had begun verifying them.
A Helena judge ruled Tuesday that the qualifications shouldn’t have been changed midstream and said the signatures of inactive voters that had been rejected should be verified and counted. District Judge Mike Menahan said those signatures could be accepted through next Wednesday.
The state has asked the Montana Supreme Court to overturn Menahan’s order, but it will have no effect on the initiative qualifying for the ballot.
“We will not stop fighting to ensure that every Montana voter who signed the petition has their signature counted,” Iwai said. “The Secretary of State and Attorney General have shown no shame in pulling new rules out of thin air, all to thwart the will of Montana voters and serve their own political agendas.”
Republican Secretary of State Christi Jacobsen must review and tabulate the petitions and is allowed to reject any petition that does not meet statutory requirements. Jacobsen must certify the general election ballots by Aug. 22.
The issue of whether abortion was legal was turned back to the states when the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022.
Montana’s Supreme Court ruled in 1999 that the state constitutional right to privacy protects the right to a pre-viability abortion. But the Republican controlled Legislature passed several bills in 2023 to restrict abortion access, including one that says the constitutional right to privacy does not protect abortion rights. Courts have blocked several of the laws, but no legal challenges have been filed against the one that tries to overturn the 1999 Supreme Court ruling.
Montanans for Election Reform, which also challenged the rule change over petition signatures, has said they believe they have enough signatures to ask voters if they want to amend the state constitution to hold open primary elections, rather than partisan ones, and to require candidates to win a majority of the vote in order to win a general election.
veryGood! (26483)
Related
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Justice Department moves forward with easing federal restrictions on marijuana
- Arkansas Supreme Court upholds 2021 voting restrictions that state judge found unconstitutional
- Philadelphia still the 6th-biggest U.S. city, but San Antonio catching up, census data shows
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Brittany Mahomes makes her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue debut
- 11 people die in mass shootings in cartel-plagued part of Mexico amid wave of mass killings
- US military says first aid shipment has been driven across a newly built US pier into the Gaza Strip
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- California’s water tunnel to cost $20 billion. State officials say the benefits are worth it
Ranking
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Will Costco, Walmart, Target be open Memorial Day 2024? What to know about grocery stores
- McDonald's to debut new sweet treat, inspired by grandmas everywhere
- Dow hits 40,000 for the first time as bull market accelerates
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Judge mulls wrong date of child’s death in triple murder case against Chad Daybell
- Facebook and Instagram face fresh EU digital scrutiny over child safety measures
- Sculpture of the late Rev. Billy Graham unveiled at US Capitol
Recommendation
Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
Harris reports Beyoncé tickets from the singer as White House releases financial disclosures
Actor Angie Harmon sues Instacart and its delivery driver for fatally shooting her dog
'One Chip Challenge' led to the death of teen Harris Wolobah, state official says
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
New immigration court docket aims to speed up removals of newly arrived migrants
Tom McMillen, head of the FBS athletic directors’ organization LEAD1, announces he’s stepping down
Wisconsin election officials fear voter confusion over 2 elections for same congressional seat