Health

Ariz. governor signs repeal of 1864 abortion ban, but law may still temporarily take effect

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(PHOENIX, Az.) — Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs on Thursday signed repeal legislation of a long dormant, near-total abortion ban that was recently revived by the state Supreme Court, stirring widespread controversy and debate.

Hobbs’ signature will reverse the pending reactivation of the restrictive abortion law that dates to 1864 — but it won’t do so immediately.

Instead, the ban, which was ruled last month to be enforceable by the Arizona Supreme Court in light of the U.S. Supreme Court overruling Roe v. Wade in 2022, cannot be struck down by the new repeal law until 90 days after the Arizona Legislature adjourns its session by the end of June.

However, the Civil War-era law, which bans nearly all abortions with exception only for a woman whose life is in danger, is on track to take effect on June 27, Arizona’s attorney general has said.

Hobbs, a Democrat, told ABC News earlier this week she was “hopeful” the legislative adjournment will come in “the next few weeks.” The three-month clock on the repeal taking effect could then make for a gap of two or three months wherein the 1864 ban would be law.

“I’ll do everything in my power to delay the implementation of the ban,” the governor said.

The Arizona attorney general, Democrat Kris Mayes, requested on Tuesday that the state’s Supreme Court put on hold its order reviving the 1864 law.

Planned Parenthood filed a similar request on Wednesday that cites “legislative deference,” the principle it says the court used to justify its reinstatement of the ban. The women’s health advocacy group says it should defer to the Legislature’s will after it passed a repeal, with a handful of Republicans joining the Democratic minority in the statehouse.

Once the 1864 ban is repealed, a separate, 15-week ban, that also doesn’t make exceptions for rape or incest, will take effect in the state.

Abortion rights activists said they won’t be satisfied with such an outcome.

“Unfortunately, Arizonans will still be living under a law that denies us the right to make decisions about our own health. Arizonans cannot afford to celebrate or lose momentum,” a spokesperson for Arizona for Abortion Access said after the repeal passed the Senate yesterday.

Voters will likely consider the issue directly in November, as pro-abortion access advocates are pushing a ballot initiative that would enshrine abortion rights in Arizona’s Constitution. Abortion opponents have been considering their own initiatives to counter this proposal.

ABC News’ Isabella Murray contributed to this report.

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