Proposal 5 | |
Reproductive Liberty Amendment[1] | |
Country: | Vermont |
Yes: | 212,323 |
No: | 64,239 |
Total: | 276,562 |
Map Size: | 250px |
Mapcaption: | Yes: No: |
The 2022 Vermont reproductive rights initiative, officially titled the "Reproductive Liberty Amendment", and listed on the ballot as Proposition 5, was a legislatively referred constitutional amendment that was adopted on November 8, 2022, by a majority of 76.8% of voters. It codified reproductive rights in the Constitution of Vermont. It was signed into the constitution by governor Phil Scott on 13 December 2022.[2]
In the 19th century, bans by state legislatures on abortion were about protecting the life of the mother given the number of deaths caused by abortions; state governments saw themselves as looking out for the lives of their citizens.[3] Vermont's first ban on abortion was passed in 1846.[4] It read:
“Whoever maliciously, or without lawful justification with intent to cause and procure the miscarriage of a woman, then pregnant with child, shall administer to her, prescribe for her, or advise or direct her to take or swallow any poison, drug, medicine or noxious thing, or shall cause or procure her, with like intent, to take or swallow any poison, drug, medicine or noxious thing, and whoever maliciously and without lawful justification, shall use any instrument or means whatever, with the like intent, and every person, with the like intent, knowingly aiding and assisting such offenders, shall be deemed guilty of felony, if the woman die in consequence thereof, and shall be imprisoned in the state prison, not more than ten years, nor less than five years; and if the woman does not die in consequence thereof, such offenders shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor; and shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not exceeding three years, nor less than one year, and pay a fine not exceeding two hundred dollars.”
In 1970, the Vermont Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the state's abortion ban in the context of the Constitution of the United States in State v. Bartlett.[5] However, the court overturned the ban less than two years later in Beacham v. Leahy based on the Vermont Constitution.[6]