June 22, 2006 Issue
Traditionally, the pro-choice movement has followed a set top-down path, dismissing rural, conservative states in favor of the federal courts. But the pro-choice establishment could learn a thing or two from one of those rural, conservative states: South Dakota. The state earned its place as one of the least choice-friendly states earlier this year when Gov. Mike Rounds signed a bill criminalizing abortion (in all cases -- including incest, rape, and fetal anomaly -- except when the mother's life is threatened). So it would seem that anyone looking for tips to revitalize the pro-choice movement should be looking elsewhere. But, writing for The Nation, Katha Pollitt uncovers a South Dakota that's not all anti-abortion billboards.
Perhaps unexpectedly, the state's new standing as a symbol of the anti-abortion movement's hopes and dreams drew the ire of many South Dakotans. The bipartisan South Dakota Campaign for Healthy Families quickly and successfully petitioned to get a ban-repeal referendum on the ballot for the November elections, collecting 38,000 signatures -- essentially one in every 20 citizens -- in record time.
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http://www.utne.com/webwatch/2006_255/news/12152-1.html