Politics & Government
Roe V. Wade Overturned: What It Means In Minnesota
The state of Minnesota has the most liberal abortion laws among its neighbors.

MINNESOTA — Minneapolis was set to become an abortion destination following the Supreme Court's ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade Friday morning.
Read the full Supreme Court decision here.
Minnesota has the most liberal abortion laws among its neighbors. Under Minnesota law, abortions are allowed up to 20 weeks during pregnancy.
Find out what's happening in Minneapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Meanwhile, North and South Dakota have abortion bans that are set to take effect following the decision. Iowa and Wisconsin already have laws on the books that ban abortion.
Also read: AG Ellison Vows To Legally Protect Women Coming To MN For Abortions
Find out what's happening in Minneapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The court's repudiation of the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision and a subsequent case on fetal liability, Planned Parenthood v. Casey, was expected. In May, Justice Samuel Alito Jr.'s majority opinion draft was leaked to Politico, setting the stage for a seismic shift in abortion rights.
At least 26 states were certain or likely to make it nearly impossible for a woman to get a procedure that was legal for her mother, grandmother or even great-grandmother, according to the Guttmacher Institute, an abortion rights research and policy group.
With the decision, abortion will be illegal or a nearly impossible procedure to get in about half of U.S. states, including large swaths of the South, Midwest and Northern Plains.
Abortion is already illegal or soon will be in 13 states with pre-existing "trigger" laws banning abortion set to take effect with the dismantling of Roe and Casey, and another four are poised to ban it, according to the Guttmacher Institute. Nine have so-called fetal heartbeat laws that make the procedure illegal before many women know they are pregnant.
Abortion rights were long considered settled law, and even as conservative states pushed at-the-time unconstitutional fetal heartbeat laws and others restricting abortion access to bring the court to this moment, many legal scholars doubted a right that generations of women and men had counted on was in serious jeopardy.
The case that made it to a full hearing before the court, Mississippi's 15-week ban on abortion, came after then-President Donald Trump appointed three conservative judges — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and, a few months before his term ended, Amy Coney Barrett, who replaced liberal stalwart Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died in September 2020.
The court heard oral arguments on the Mississippi case in December.
Lawyers for the state of Mississippi had proposed an array of mechanisms to uphold the 15-week abortion ban but said the court ultimately should overturn the "egregiously wrong" Roe and Casey rulings.
If the court "does not impose a substantial obstacle to 'a significant number of women' seeking abortions," the state argued at the time, the justices should reinterpret the "undue burden" standard established in Roe and give the state the authority to "prohibit elective abortions before viability" of the fetus.
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