Oct 29 (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected an attempt by anti-abortion activists to place what they call a “personhood amendment” on the Oklahoma ballot to define an embryo as a human being from the moment of conception.
The anti-abortion group Personhood Oklahoma had appealed to the Supreme Court, challenging the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s decision in April to strike down the ballot initiative.
The ballot question would have asked Oklahoma voters to amend the state constitution to expand the definition of a human being to include a fertilized egg. The state’s highest court said the proposed constitutional amendment was “clearly unconstitutional” because the U.S. Supreme Court already had decided the issue.
Passage of a personhood law or constitutional amendment would have the effect of banning abortion in the state, both supporters and critics have said.
The Center for Reproductive Rights, the American Civil Liberties Union and local abortion rights groups sued in March to keep the proposed initiative off the November election ballot.
On appeal to the country’s highest court, Personhood Oklahoma argued that the state court’s decision to block the initiative took away their supporters’ rights to free speech and to participate in the democratic process. But the U.S. Supreme Court, without comment, refused to hear the case, according to an order issued Monday.
Abortion rights groups welcomed the court’s decision.









