Current:Home > FinanceAbortion rights supporters report having enough signatures to qualify for Montana ballot -Zenith Investment School
Abortion rights supporters report having enough signatures to qualify for Montana ballot
View
Date:2025-04-17 20:48:36
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! (93286)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Blake Snell, a two-time Cy Young winner, agrees to a two-year deal with the Giants
- Barack Obama releases NCAA March Madness 2024 brackets: See the former president's picks
- Cisco ready for AI revolution as it acquires Splunk in $28 billion deal
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Princess Kate's photograph of Queen Elizabeth flagged as 'digitally enhanced' by Getty
- Armed thieves steal cash from guards collecting video machine cash boxes in broad daylight heist
- Peter Navarro must report to federal prison today after Chief Justice John Roberts rejects bid to delay sentence
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- University of Maryland lifts Greek life ban, hazing investigation into five chapters continues
Ranking
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Oprah Winfrey denounces fat shaming in ABC special: 'Making fun of my weight was national sport'
- The Fed is meeting this week. Here's what experts are saying about the odds of a rate cut.
- Rep. Cory Mills rescues 23 Americans, including Mitch Albom, from chaos in Haiti
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- MacKenzie Scott donates $640 million -- more than double her initial plan -- to nonprofit applicants
- New York moves to update its fracking ban to include liquid carbon-dioxide as well as water
- The Best Tummy Control Swimsuits of 2024 for All-Day Confidence, From Bikinis to One-Pieces & More
Recommendation
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Hope for Israel-Hamas war truce tempered by growing rift between Netanyahu and his U.S. and European allies
Chicago sues gunmaker Glock over conversions to machine guns
Contraceptives will be available without a prescription in New York following a statewide order
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Horoscopes Today, March 18, 2024
US marriages surpass 2 million for first time in years as divorce rates decline: CDC
How Bruce Willis' Family Is Celebrating His 69th Birthday Amid Dementia Battle