The group that helped defeat a measure two years ago to try to outlaw most abortions in South Dakota plans to again open an office in Rapid City to fight a similar ballot measure this year.
The South Dakota Campaign for Healthy Families will open its office at 1315 Haines Ave., Suite C with an open house from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday.
"South Dakota's families don't need big Government telling them what they can and can't do," Republican and former State Representative Jan Nicolay, co-chairwoman of the Campaign for Healthy Families, said in a news release. "Families know their own circumstances best, but this ban would strip families of a private, moral decision. And a woman would be forced to carry a pregnancy to term even in the fetus couldn't survive on its own after delivery."
In April, the group VoteYesForLife.com submitted the requisite signatures to put on the ballot a measure that would ban abortion in most cases. Unlike a 2006 law that was overturned by voters, however, the current measure includes exceptions to allow the procedure when necessary to protect the health of a woman and allow abortions in cases of rape or incest.
The 2006 proposal, rejected by 56 percent of voters, would have allowed abortion only to save a woman's life.
As with the 2006 measure, passage would likely lead to a lawsuit that could end up before the U.S. Supreme Court and possibly allow the high court to reconsider its 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.
Posted in Local on Sunday, July 27, 2008 11:00 pm | Tags: Journal, Rapid_city, Abortion, Ballot, Election
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