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Arizona Reinstates 160-Year-Old Abortion Ban

Arizona’s highest court on Tuesday upheld an 1864 law that bans nearly all abortions, a decision that could have far-reaching consequences for women’s health care and election-year politics in a critical battleground state.

The 1864 law, the court said in a 4-to-2 decision, “is now enforceable.” But the court put its ruling on hold for the moment, and sent the matter back to a lower court to hear additional arguments about the law’s constitutionality.

Because of a 14-day stay and another 45-day delay before enforcement, it will very likely be weeks before the law goes into effect.

The Arizona Supreme Court said that because the federal right to abortion in Roe v. Wade had been overturned, there was no federal or state law preventing Arizona from enforcing the near-total ban on abortions, which had sat dormant for decades.

Read the Arizona Supreme Court’s Abortion Ruling

The state’s highest court on Tuesday upheld an 1864 law that bans nearly all abortions.

Read Document 47 pages

The ruling could prompt clinics in Arizona to soon stop providing abortions and women to travel to nearby states like California, New Mexico or Colorado to end their pregnancies. Until now, the procedure has been legal in Arizona through 15 weeks of pregnancy.

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