2008 Colorado Amendment 48 Explained

Amendment 48
Defining a person to be any human being from the moment of fertilization.
Yes:618,761
No:1,691,165
Total:2,309,926
Mapcaption:Against

Colorado Amendment 48 was an overwhelmingly defeated initiative to amend the definition of a person to "any human being from the moment of fertilization".

The initiative was proposed jointly by Kristine Burton and Michael Burton[1] of the now-defunct organization, Colorado for Equal Rights.

This definition would have applied to all sections of Colorado law, thus giving a fetus the equal rights of life, liberty, and property as a fully developed, born person would.[2]

Text of the Proposal

SECTION 1. Article II of the constitution of the state of Colorado is amended BY THE ADDITION OF A NEW SECTION to read:

Section 31. Person defined. AS USED IN SECTIONS 3, 6, AND 25 OF ARTICLE II OF THE STATE CONSTITUTION, THE TERMS "PERSON" OR "PERSONS" SHALL INCLUDE ANY HUMAN BEING FROM THE MOMENT OF FERTILIZATION.[3]

Controversy

Colorado Right to Life supported the amendment.[4] There was bipartisan opposition [5] -- Planned Parenthood and 2008 Colorado Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate Mark Udall were joined by anti-abortion Democratic Governor Bill Ritter, National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), and Republican Senate candidate Bob Schaffer.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.elections.colorado.gov/WWW/default/Amendments%20and%20Referenda/36%20Statement%20of%20Sufficiency.pdf Statement of Sufficiency
  2. Brown, Jennifer. "Personhood" Amendment Fails. Denver Post. November 4, 2008.
  3. http://www.leg.state.co.us/LCS/InitRefr/0708InitRefr.nsf/89fb842d0401c52087256cbc00650696/16f403e0c19126f98725744b0050fd4d/$FILE/Amendment%2048.pdf Amendment 48: Definition of Person
  4. http://www.coloradorighttolife.org/news/2008/09/vote-yes-48 Vote Yes on 48
  5. Jorgensen, Leslie. Amendment 48: Opposition galvanizes Democrats, Republicans . Colorado Statesman. October 10, 2008.