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Opponents of abortion use anti-trans messages

Opponents of abortion use anti-trans messages

By CHRISTINE FERNANDO

CHICAGO (AP) — Billboards with the words “STOP pediatric gender surgery.” Pamphlets warning about endangering minors. “PROTECT PARENTAL RIGHTS” on church bulletins.

If voters in nine states decide whether to enshrine abortion rights in their state constitutions, opponents use parental rights and anti-transgender messages to try undermine support for the voting proposals.

The measures make no mention of gender-affirming surgeries, and legal experts say changing existing parental notification and consent laws regarding abortions and gender-affirming care for minors would require legal action. But anti-abortion groups seeking to end their losing streak at the ballot box have turned to the ballot box kind of language many Republican candidates across the country are using them in their own campaigns as they try to mobilize conservative Christian voters.

“It’s really bizarre to suggest that this amendment addresses things like gender reassignment surgery for minors,” said Matt Harris, an associate professor of political science at Park University in Parkville, Missouri, a state where abortion rights are on the ballot.

Since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down constitutional protections for abortion, voters in seven states, including conservatives, have voted Kentucky, Montana And Ohiohave either protected abortion rights or thwarted attempts to restrict them.

“If you can’t win by telling the truth, you need a better argument, even if that means capitalizing on the demonization of trans kids,” said Dr. Alex Dworak, a family physician in Omaha. Nebraskawhere anti-abortion groups use the strategy.

Linking ballot initiatives for abortion rights to parental rights and gender affirmation is one strategy borrowed from scripts used at Michigan And Ohiowhere voters nevertheless enshrined abortion rights in state constitutions.

Both states still require minors to obtain parental consent for abortions, and the new changes have not affected parental involvement or gender-affirming health care laws in either state, said David Cohen, a law professor at Drexel University.

“It’s just recycling the the same strategies” said Cohen.

In addition to Missouri and Nebraska, the states where voters are considering constitutional amendments this fall are Montana, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Nevada and South Dakota.

Missouri’s abortion ballot measure has mainly become a target. The amendment would prevent the government from infringing on “a person’s fundamental right to reproductive freedom.”

Gov. Mike Parson and U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley, both Republicans, have argued that the proposal would allow minors to have abortions and gender confirmation surgeries without parental involvement.

The amendment protects reproductive health services, “including but not limited to” a list of items such as prenatal care, childbirth, contraception and abortion. There is no mention of gender-affirming care, but Missouri state Sen. Mary Elizabeth Coleman, a Republican and attorney with the conservative Thomas More Society, said it’s possible it could be considered reproductive health care.

Several legal experts told The Associated Press that this would require a court ruling that is unlikely.

“It would be a stretch for a court to say that anything related to gender-affirming care counts as reproductive health care,” said Marcia McCormick, a professor of law and gender studies at Saint Louis University. She noted that the examples cited in the Missouri amendment as reproductive health care are all directly related to pregnancy.