Minnesota Democrats say they rode a wave of anger over the U.S. Supreme Court's reversal of Roe v. Wade into complete control of state government, giving them a clear directive from voters to enshrine abortion protections into state law.
Democrats' push will vault the issue to the forefront when lawmakers return to the Capitol in January after years of inaction under divided government. DFL House and Senate leaders say they have enough votes to pass abortion rights bills and send them to the governor's desk — likely for the first time in state history.
"This is a pro-choice state. Period. Full stop," said Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, who won re-election last week alongside DFL Gov. Tim Walz. "With a historic pro-choice trifecta in the Legislature, we aren't just on defense, we can proactively invest in policies and programs that improve people's care and improve people's lives."
Abortion opponents are already criticizing the agenda as "extreme."
"It's also out of step with Minnesotans who support commonsense protections for women and children, such as parental notification before abortions are performed on minor girls and protection for unborn children late in pregnancy," said Paul Stark, spokesman for Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life. "We will work hard to see that this harmful effort does not succeed."
Minnesota doesn't have any laws on the books ensuring abortion access, but the state Supreme Court ruled in its 1995 Doe v. Gomez decision that the procedure is constitutionally protected, stating that women have a "fundamental right to reach a private decision on whether to obtain an abortion."
DFL leaders and abortion rights advocates said the reversal of Roe in the Dobbs v. Jackson case showed that the state could be a few Supreme Court justices from that access being taken away.
"We know that Supreme Court terms end. There's a mandatory retirement age for judges in Minnesota," said House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park. "We will be working together to enshrine in law — as well as having in case law — protections that Minnesotans can count on going forward."