Minnesota has enshrined language into law guaranteeing the right to abortion for the first time in the state's 165-year history.
The law, known as the Protect Reproductive Options Act — PRO Act for short — was signed by Gov. Tim Walz Tuesday and went into effect immediately.
The fast-tracked legislation is the first in a series of proposals pushed by DFL-led government following the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade last June. Together, the bills would represent a substantial shift in what Minnesota's laws say about abortion.
The proposals face strong opposition from Republican legislators in the minority, who have pushed to add some regulations to the procedure in the third trimester.
Here are answers to frequently asked questions about the PRO Act, several other abortion bills moving at the Capitol and what they'd mean for abortion access in Minnesota:
What is Minnesota's current landscape for abortion access?
Minnesota has eight in-person abortion clinics and is one of the few states in the region that can take on patients since Roe's reversal. That's because in 1995, Minnesota's Supreme Court issued its own ruling affirming a constitutional right to privacy around decisions about abortion, similar to Roe. The state decision went a step further, allowing low-income women to use the state's Medical Assistance program to cover the costs of the procedure.
In July, a Ramsey County judge also struck down a handful of abortion regulations in state law, including a 24-hour waiting period, an informed consent requirement and two-parent notification for minors.