Kansas’ top court rejects 2 anti-abortion laws, bolstering a state right to abortion access
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ highest court on Friday struck down state laws regulating abortion providers more strictly than other health care providers and banning a common second-trimester procedure, reaffirming its stance that the state constitution protects abortion access.
The Kansas Supreme Court’s rulings in two separate cases signal that the state’s Republican-controlled Legislature faces stricter limits on regulating abortion than GOP lawmakers thought and suggests other restrictions could fall. Lawsuits in lower state courts already are challenging restrictions on medication abortions, a ban on doctors using teleconferences to meet with patients, rules for what doctors must tell patients before an abortion and a requirement that patients wait 24 hours after receiving information about a procedure to terminate their pregnancies.
Friday’s decisions were both 5-1 with Justice K.J. Wall not participating.
Justice Caleb Stegall — the lone dissenter in both decisions — was appointed by conservative Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and is widely regarded as the court’s most conservative member. He was the only dissenter in the 2019 decision.