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After my getting all worked up about this, Joe found the following
article.

  "Egg As Person" Is Red Meat With Few Calories

by: Andrew Oh-Willeke
Wed Nov 14, 2007 at 07:22 PM MST
The ballot initiative defining a fertilized egg as a person for
purposes of certain provisions of the Colorado Constitution that the
Colorado Supreme Court cleared to circulate petitions for on Tuesday
will probably energize pro-choice activists and abortion foes in the
2008 election.  If it passes, however, it will be ruled mostly
unconstitutional and will have only quirky impacts on Colorado law.
On Tuesday the Colorado Supreme Court affirmed a ruling of the Title
Board, which determined that a measure defining a fertilized egg as a
person did not violate the single-subject requirement of the state
constitution.  But the Colorado Supreme Court did not uphold the
constitutionality of the measure.

If enacted the courts will consider the initiative, which never
mentions the words abortion or contraception but is designed to ban
both.  They will almost certainly find that the measure is
unconstitutional and cannot ban either.

A state cannot ban abortion.  It can't do it with a ballot initiative
and it can't do it with a state law.  This is the holding of Roe v.
Wade, decided in 1973, and this holding has been reaffirmed by the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1992 in Planned Parenthood v. Casey when the
U.S. Supreme Court had moved considerably to the right politically of
the Roe v. Wade court.  Constitutional law scholars sometimes
describe Roe as a "super precedent".

A state likewise can't ban contraception.  The U.S. Constitution
protected couples' rights to use contraception before it protected
the right to choose, through the 1965 case Griswold v. Connecticut
(married couples).  Eisenstadt v. Baird extended the right to
unmarried couples in 1972.  These cases remain good law as well.  The
Lawrence v. Texas case in 2003, establishing that consensual sodomy
between adult men may not be criminalized, is a direct descendant of
the earlier contraception cases using the same reasoning.

What's left?  This measure is a symbolic statement about abortion
that will almost immediately be rendered a nullity, and various
quirks may arise in unexpected places in Colorado law.

In real life, some of the more likely impacts may be to increase the
stakes for doctors sued for medical malpractice in connection with a
miscarriage or still birth, something that has happened based upon a
measure adopted in Oklahoma.  The measure could also open the door to
criminal liability for women who don't obtain proper pre-natal care.
The measure could impact state funding for stem-cell research.  And,
it might cause individuals who participate in a crime that gives rise
to a miscarriage to face life in prison on felony murder charges.

The measure might also transform the immigration debate.  Currently,
pregnant women can receive pre-natal care through Medicaid even if
they are undocumented immigrants, through the grace of the state
legislature.  This measure might give that administrative declaration
a state constitutional dimension.

All of this, of course, assumes that the measure will pass.  This is
hardly a foregone conclusion.  A comparably strict abortion ban put
to voters in conservative South Dakota in 2006 failed by a 44-56 margin.

In 1998, Colorado voters approved a parental notification of abortion
statute, while rejecting a statute banning partial-birth abortion.
In 1988, Colorado voters rejected a measure banning the use of public
funds for abortion, despite having passed a similar measure in 1984.
(A full list of Colorado's voting history on initiatives can be found
here.)  The overall trend of voters in Colorado has been to be
nuanced, something the current "Egg as Person" measure is not.

So, while getting this measure on the ballot may be red meat for
political conservatives, it may have a marginal and unpredictable
policy impact, even if it does pass, and it may have a hard time
winning voter support in the November 2008 election

Nina Brown
  "Circumstances determine our lives, but we shape our lives by what
we make of our circumstances."

Secretary/Founding Board Member, The Alliance for Medical Research
(http://www.tamr-ed.org)
Founding Board Member, Texans for Advancement of Medical Research
(http://www.txamr.org)
Vice President, Houston Area Parkinson Society
  (http://www.hapsonline.org)
State Coordinator, Parkinson's Action Network
(http://www.parkinsonsaction.org)



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