Current:Home > reviewsArkansas is sued for rejecting petitions on an abortion-rights ballot measure -Infinite Edge Capital
Arkansas is sued for rejecting petitions on an abortion-rights ballot measure
View
Date:2025-04-19 20:05:30
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas is being sued for rejecting petitions in favor of a proposed ballot measure to scale back the state’s abortion ban, with supporters asking the state Supreme Court on Tuesday to order officials to start counting more than 100,000 signatures from people who back amending the constitution.
The ballot measure wouldn’t make abortion a constitutionally protected right, but it would limit when abortion can be banned. Giving voters a chance to weigh in on the state’s ban would test support for abortion rights in Arkansas, where top elected officials regularly promote their opposition to the procedure.
Had they all been verified, the signatures submitted on the petitions would have been enough to get the measure on the November ballot. Arkansans for Limited Government, the group supporting the proposed constitutional amendment, asked the court to reverse the state’s decision. The group also wants the court to make Secretary of State John Thurston’s office begin counting.
The secretary of state’s office said on July 10 that the group didn’t submit required statements related to the paid signature gatherers it used. The group has said the documentation it submitted — which included a list of the gatherers — did meet the legal requirements.
“The secretary’s unlawful rejection of petitioners’ submission prevents the people of Arkansas from exercising their right to adopt, or reject, the amendment,” the group’s lawsuit said. “This court should correct the secretary’s error and reaffirm Arkansas’s motto, Regnat Populus, The People Rule.”
Thurston’s office said it was reviewing the lawsuit and did not have an immediate comment.
The proposed amendment would prohibit laws banning abortion in the first 20 weeks of gestation, and allow later abortions in cases of rape, incest, threats to the woman’s health or life, or if the fetus would be unlikely to survive birth. Arkansas now bans abortion at any time during a pregnancy, unless it’s necessary to protect the mother’s life in a medical emergency.
The ballot proposal lacked support from national abortion-rights groups such as Planned Parenthood because it would still have allowed abortion to be banned 20 weeks into pregnancy, which is earlier than other states where abortion remains legal.
The group submitted more than 101,000 signatures on the state’s July 5 deadline. They needed at least 90,704 signatures from registered voters and a minimum number from 50 counties.
Election officials cited a 2013 Arkansas law requiring campaigns to submit statements identifying each paid canvasser by name and confirming that rules for signature-gathering were explained to them.
State records show the group did submit, on June 27, a signed affidavit including a list of its paid canvassers and a statement saying that the petition rules had been explained to them, and that its July 5 submission additionally included affidavits from each paid signature-gatherer acknowledging that the initiative group had provided them with all the rules and regulations required by the law.
The state has asserted that this documentation didn’t comply because it wasn’t signed by the sponsor of the initiative, and because all of these documents were not included along with the signed petitions. In the lawsuit, Arkansans for Limited Government said Thurston’s office assured the group on July 5 it had filed the necessary paperwork with its petitions.
Despite these disputes, the group says Arkansas law requires they be given an opportunity to provide any necessary paperwork so that the state can begin counting the signatures.
The group’s lawsuit on Tuesday said the state’s refusal to count the signatures anyway runs counter to what the state itself has argued in two previous cases on ballot measures before the Arkansas Supreme Court.
The U.S. Supreme Court removed the nationwide right to abortion in 2022 with a ruling that created a national push to have voters decide the matter state by state.
Lawmakers in the Republican-controlled legislature approved the current law. Litigating this effort to reinstate the petitions could be difficult. Conservatives hold a majority of seats on the seven-member Arkansas Supreme Court.
Oscar Stilley, an attorney not affiliated with the abortion initiative campaign. filed a separate lawsuit Tuesday also seeking to reverse the state’s decision on the petitions.
veryGood! (62)
Related
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Elderly man with cane arrested after Florida police say he robbed a bank with a knife
- Reports: Dodgers land free-agent outfielder Teoscar Hernandez on one-year deal
- Indiana governor seeks childcare and education policies in his final year
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Who will win Super Bowl 58? 49ers, Ravens, Bills lead odds before playoffs begin
- Federal investigators can’t determine exact cause of 2022 helicopter crash near Philadelphia
- Alaska Airlines and United cancel hundreds of flights following mid-air door blowout
- Small twin
- Boeing jetliner that suffered inflight blowout was restricted because of concern over warning light
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Convicted killer pleads not guilty to jailhouse attack on killer of California student Kristin Smart
- From Taylor Swift's entourage to adorable PDA: Best Golden Globe moments you missed on TV
- 56 million credit cardholders have been in debt for at least a year, survey finds
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- JetBlue's CEO to step down, will be replaced by 1st woman to lead a big U.S. airline
- Lawyers for ex-gang leader held in Tupac Shakur killing say he should be released from jail
- Nashville man killed his wife on New Year's Day with a hammer and buried her body, police say
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Campaign to save Benito the Giraffe wins him a new, more spacious home in warmer southern Mexico
2 killed, 9 injured in 35-vehicle pileup on Interstate 5 near Bakersfield, California
Reports: Dodgers land free-agent outfielder Teoscar Hernandez on one-year deal
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Family-run businesses, contractors and tens of thousands of federal workers wait as Congress attempts to avoid government shutdown
Former club president regrets attacking Turkish soccer referee but denies threatening to kill him
Voters begin casting ballots in Bhutan, where an economic crisis looms large