Government & Politics

Abortion will go back on Missouri ballot in Republican effort to reinstate ban

Missouri voters will decide whether to reimpose an abortion ban next year, after a landmark statewide vote last year that enshrined the right to the procedure in the state constitution and overturned a previous ban.

The Republican-controlled Senate on Wednesday approved a proposed constitutional amendment that, if approved by voters, would overturn a November vote that legalized abortion access.

But the question that voters will see makes no mention of an abortion ban, a move intended to entice voters to approve the measure.

The decision was remarkable, signifying a major retaliatory response from the Republican-controlled General Assembly after nearly 52% of voters overturned the state’s abortion ban. It marks a critical moment for abortion rights supporters and opponents, who will both gear up for another vote on whether access to the procedure should remain legal.

“A lot of us were born before Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973 and I cannot believe that we’re going backwards,” Sen. Tracy McCreery, a St. Louis Democrat, told reporters after the vote. “We are going backwards as it relates to women’s options for health care.”

Before the vote, McCreery said on the Senate floor that, if approved, the measure would make Missouri “even more dangerous to be a pregnant woman.”

“It’s already deadly for women of color, but now it’s like we’re on a very dangerous path right now,” she said.

The vote also illustrates a continuation of Republican attempts to curtail direct democracy in Missouri as voters have used the ballot box to pass several policies seen as progressive, such as abortion rights, a minimum wage increase, Medicaid expansion and marijuana legalization.

“What I would have to say to voters is, you know, they want these issues, and then they never make the politicians pay when they take them away from them,” said Senate Minority Leader Doug Beck, a St. Louis Democrat. “And until that happens, nothing’s going to change. They’re going to keep doing it.”

After House Republicans approved the measure last month, Senate Democrats have long excoriated the proposal as an attack on women’s health care. In an explosive move, Senate Republicans shut down a Democratic filibuster of the legislation while senators were negotiating changes to the measure and forced a vote.

The Senate on Wednesday voted 22 to 11 to shut down the filibuster using a maneuver called the “Previous Question,” a nuclear option that is rarely used. And then senators voted 21 to 11 to put the measure on the ballot.

Senate Democrats on Wednesday vowed to shut down all action in the Senate in response to the GOP decision to halt debate on the proposal. Before voting on the measure, Senate Republicans made no mention of the legislation on the floor or their plan to shut down debate.

After adjourning session for the year, Senate Republican leaders also did not hold a press conference to explain their decision to shut down debate. But The Star spoke with Sen. Mike Cierpiot, a Lee’s Summit Republican at the state Capitol, who said he felt it wasn’t possible for Republicans to avoid shutting off the filibuster.

“Our positions are so different on abortion,” Cierpiot said, referring to Democrats and Republicans. “I would just say that on this, we’re just giving people another bite at the apple.”

Senate Republican leaders, in a press release, said they accomplished many of their legislative priorities this year, which included “defending life.”

“These weren’t just conservative wins, they were wins for the people of Missouri,” said Senate Majority Leader Tony Luetkemeyer, a Parkville Republican. “We made communities safer, helped families keep more of their paycheck, expanded opportunity in our schools, defended life and protected the integrity of our constitution. We said what we were going to do, and we did it.”

Shortly after the vote, a crowd of abortion rights supporters unfurled banners from the upper gallery of the Senate and began chanting in opposition to the measure. Senate leadership ordered security to remove everyone from the gallery, including reporters and spectators, for a few minutes.

The explosive standoff in the state Senate was months in the making. In both the lead-up to and the months after the November election, abortion opponents repeatedly signaled that they would push for another competing ballot measure in the future.

The proposal will appear on the November 2026 ballot or at an earlier election if called by Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe.

It will ask Missourians to strike down Amendment 3, which legalized abortion in the state. The measure would allow abortions in medical emergencies and cases of fetal anomalies, such as birth defects. It would also allow the procedure in exceptionally rare cases of rape or incest within 12 weeks of gestational age.

While the language of the amendment is silent on when exactly abortion would be banned, it completely strikes down the language of Amendment 3. Therefore, it’s unclear whether the amendment is intended to allow the state’s previous abortion ban to take effect or give lawmakers the ability to pass legislation to restrict access.

In addition to the abortion ban, the constitutional amendment would ban gender-affirming care for transgender residents under the age of 18. Those procedures, which include hormone therapy, are already banned under state law but became a rallying cry among abortion opponents who falsely claimed that Amendment 3 opened the door to legalizing them.

Democrats have fought Republicans behind closed doors to have the transgender language removed, framing it as ballot candy intended to trick voters into approving the abortion ban.

While the wording of the measure is subject to change, abortion supporters have also sharply criticized the proposed ballot language that lawmakers want voters to see.

The question does not mention an abortion ban and instead says it would guarantee “access to care for medical emergencies, ectopic pregnancies, and miscarriages” among other lines. The language also purports to “ensure women’s safety during abortions.”

On the steps on the Missouri Capitol, a crowd of abortion rights supporters protest legislation on Wednesday, April 30, 2025, that would enact a new abortion ban in Missouri.
On the steps on the Missouri Capitol, a crowd of abortion rights supporters protest legislation on Wednesday, April 30, 2025, that would enact a new abortion ban in Missouri. Kacen Bayless kbayless@kcstar.com

Overturning the historic vote

The vote to legalize abortion in conservative Missouri was historic, offering a fierce rebuke of Republican state lawmakers who had spent decades restricting access.

The constitutional amendment overturned a near-total ban that was enacted in 2022 after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade.

In the wake of the vote, opponents have consistently argued that Missourians didn’t understand what they were voting on when they approved the measure. They have claimed Amendment 3 would lead to unrestricted and unregulated abortions.

But months after the vote, abortion providers are still fighting state officials in court to restore complete access. In February, the Planned Parenthood affiliate in Kansas City performed the first elective abortion in the state since the vote.

It also marked the first abortion at its Kansas City clinic since 2018. While access to procedural abortions is available in Planned Parenthood clinics in Kansas City, Columbia, and St. Louis, medication abortions are still inaccessible.

This story was originally published May 14, 2025 at 5:19 PM.

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Kacen Bayless
The Kansas City Star
Kacen Bayless is the Democracy Insider for The Kansas City Star, a position that uncovers how politics and government affect communities across the sprawling Kansas City area. Prior to this role, he covered Missouri politics for The Star. A graduate of the University of Missouri, he previously was an investigative reporter in coastal South Carolina. 
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