Go to Content Go to Navigation Go to Navigation Go to Site Search Homepage

Des Moines, IA— The Iowa Supreme Court today heard oral arguments in a case that could strip Iowans of their fundamental right to abortion under the Iowa Constitution. The Court is expected to release its ruling in the case by the end of June. The Court will decide whether to uphold an earlier ruling by the Court that found a 72-hour waiting period unconstitutional and established Iowans’ constitutional right to abortion.

“The stakes in this case are much higher than just the medically-unnecessary 24-hour waiting period,” said Jamie Burch Elliott, Director of Public Affairs for Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa. “At risk is Iowans’ reproductive freedom to decide when and how to start or expand a family. Instead of wasting time and taxpayer dollars on political overreach, lawmakers need to support health care that meets the needs of Iowans and their individually unique and personal circumstances. It is critical Iowans speak up and tell their state representatives they will not tolerate elected officials who want to take away the fundamental rights of the people they serve.” 

Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa, the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault and the Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence joined Iowa Abortion Advocate Rue Monroe in a virtual news conference today to discuss oral arguments and the potential impact of the case on abortion access in Iowa.  

The current case regarding a similar 24-hour waiting period comes as federal abortion protections hang by a thread. The U.S. Supreme Court is releasing a decision this year that could weaken or overturn Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that established a right to abortion. If Roe falls, states would decide the future of abortion access. In the absence of federal and state constitutional protections, Iowa lawmakers would have the unchecked authority to further restrict abortion access, which Republican legislators have made clear is their intention. 

 

Lower Iowa courts have already twice ruled against the medically unnecessary waiting period, saying it indiscriminately subjects all people to an unjustified delay in care, regardless of the patient’s decisional certainty, income, distance from the clinic, and status as a domestic violence or rape victim. The law, the court said, takes no care to target patients who are uncertain when they present for their procedures but, instead, imposes blanket hardships upon all women.

“Reproductive health services are an essential component of routine medical care for all birthing people, including abortion care,” said Dr. Maria Corona, Executive Director, Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence. “Barriers to abortion access threaten the autonomy of all birthing people and eliminate health care options and reproductive freedom creating more harm and systemic violence.”

 A district court judge said the law would have set up medically unnecessary obstacles for Iowans that would have delayed and even prevented them from obtaining care. That’s because many people seeking abortion must find reliable transportation, drive for hours, take time off work and arrange for childcare. Delays in abortion care, and required additional travel, would effectively put abortion out of reach.

 “We trust survivors to make their own decisions, and we support survivors who become pregnant as a result of sexual violence whether they choose abortion, adoption, or to be a parent,” said Elizabeth Barnhill, Executive Director of the Iowa Coalition Against Sexual Assault. “People who commit sexual violence rob survivors of the right to decide what happens to their bodies. Restrictive abortion laws like the 24-hour waiting period continue this harm and make it more difficult for survivors to heal from abuse. We hope the Iowa Supreme Court will make the right decision in this case, and trust survivors.”

###

 

Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa (PPAI) is an independent, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization with a mission of fostering and preserving a social and political climate favorable to reproductive health. To meet this mission, PPAI engages in lobbying, issues education, and supporter mobilization.

Tags:

Join the Email List!

Stay up to date on our fight against the constitutional amendment and for reproductive freedom. Subscribe to our emails now.

Sign Up Here

The Constitutional Amendment Process Explained.

Learn More

Fund this Fight!

Donate to support Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa

Donate now

Join the fight, volunteer!

Stand with Planned Parenthood Advocates of Iowa in the fight to oppose the constitutional amendment every step of the way. 

Become a Volunteer

Planned Parenthood cares about your data privacy. We and our third-party vendors use cookies and other tools to collect, store, monitor, and analyze information about your interaction with our site to improve performance, analyze your use of our sites and assist in our marketing efforts. You may opt out of the use of these cookies and other tools at any time by visiting Cookie Settings. By clicking “Allow All Cookies” you consent to our collection and use of such data, and our Terms of Use. For more information, see our Privacy Notice.

Cookie Settings

Planned Parenthood cares about your data privacy. We and our third-party vendors, use cookies, pixels, and other tracking technologies to collect, store, monitor, and process certain information about you when you access and use our services, read our emails, or otherwise engage with us. The information collected might relate to you, your preferences, or your device. We use that information to make the site work, analyze performance and traffic on our website, to provide a more personalized web experience, and assist in our marketing efforts. We also share information with our social media, advertising, and analytics partners. You can change your default settings according to your preference. You cannot opt-out of our Necessary Cookies as they are deployed to ensure the proper functioning of our website (such as prompting the cookie banner and remembering your settings, to log into your account, to redirect you when you log out, etc.). For more information, please see our Privacy Notice.

Marketing

On

We use online advertising to promote our mission and help constituents find our services. Marketing pixels help us measure the success of our campaigns.

Performance

On

We use qualitative data, including session replay, to learn about your user experience and improve our products and services.

Analytics

On

We use web analytics to help us understand user engagement with our website, trends, and overall reach of our products.