Any day now, the Florida supreme court is set to decide whether a radical amendment to enshrine virtually unlimited abortion on demand in the state constitution will appear on the ballot this November. The proponents, largely funded by Planned Parenthood and other abortion businesses, the ACLU, and Open Society Fund, have already spent $15 million in their efforts to turn Florida into the late-term abortion destination of the southeast U.S. and the Caribbean.
During oral arguments last month, Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz referred to the amendment as a âwolfâ that is sweeping in its extremism. We agree.
The proposed amendment purports to be about one issue: limiting âgovernment interferenceâ with abortion. In reality, it lumps together at least eight distinct topics. It would tie the hands of every branch of government from enforcing laws on the books that are overwhelmingly popular in Florida.
Thatâs not allowed under the stateâs single-subject requirement, and amendment proponents know it. Voters must clearly understand what theyâre voting on when they consider changing the state constitution. Florida courts have ruled against deceptive amendments like this time after time. The only way it will pass is if voters donât know the truth until itâs too late.
When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, our movement was given a historic opportunity. But the battle for life became much more difficult.
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