Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz recalls with vivid clarity the day his wife Gwen called him crying.
Trying to start a family, they’d been going through fertility treatments at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester for seven years. Each time they hoped for good news, only to be told the treatments hadn’t worked.
“I said, ‘Not again,’” Walz recalled. “She said, ‘No, I’m pregnant.’ It’s not by chance that we named our daughter Hope.”
The DFL governor is opening up about his family’s experience going through fertility treatments in the wake of an Alabama Supreme Court ruling last month that said embryos created through in vitro fertilization (IVF) should be considered children. Several IVF clinics in Alabama immediately suspended treatments in response to the ruling, and lawmakers across the country are scrambling to shore up laws to prevent something similar from happening in their state.
Minnesota Democrats, who narrowly control the Legislature, are expected to propose adding language to a law passed last year codifying abortion rights to also guarantee access to IVF and fertility treatments.
“I think it was inconceivable that the Alabama Supreme Court would issue the kind of decision that they did without realizing the impacts that they have, so people are rightfully concerned and want to make sure our laws are clear in protecting their ability to access that health care,” said House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park.
No bill has been introduced yet, but lawmakers are expected to debate language during the legislative session, which must adjourn in May.
Sen. Julia Coleman, R-Waconia, said that “while this language probably isn’t necessary, it’s also not the divisive issue Democrats want it to be.”