DES MOINES, Iowa — The Iowa Supreme Court said Friday the state's strict abortion law is legal, telling a lower court to dissolve a temporary block on the law and allowing Iowa to ban most abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy — before many women know they are pregnant.
The 4-3 ruling is a win for Republican lawmakers, and Iowa joins more than a dozen other states with restrictive abortion laws following the U.S. Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022.
The instructions to the lower court will be formally sent in 21 days and, for now, abortion remains legal in Iowa up to 20 weeks of pregnancy. It is unclear how long the district court would take to act after that point.
Currently, 14 states have near-total bans at all stages of pregnancy and three ban abortions at about six weeks.
The Iowa Supreme Court's majority reiterated on Friday that there is no constitutional right to abortion. As the state requested, they instructed courts to assess whether the government has a legitimate interest in restricting the procedure, rather than whether there is too heavy a burden for people seeking abortion access.
In writing the majority's opinion, Justice Matthew McDermott wrote that a right to an abortion is ''not rooted at all in our state's history and tradition.'' In fact, the majority determined it was the opposite.
''The state's interest in protecting the unborn can be traced to Iowa's earliest days,'' he wrote.
But Chief Justice Susan Christensen emphatically delivered a dissent, writing that the majority opinion ''strips Iowa women of their bodily autonomy.''