LINCOLN — U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts is bankrolling a conservative ballot effort to ban abortions in the Nebraska constitution after the first trimester, or 13 weeks of pregnancy.
Ricketts, R-Neb., gave $500,000 to the effort. He was the only donor named in the first campaign finance report of the group Protect Women and Children filed with the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission.
Ricketts has supported previous efforts to put conservative measures on the ballot, including the 2015 effort to restore Nebraska’s death penalty, an effort which his family largely financed.
He had no immediate comment Tuesday.
Ricketts, Nebraska Right to Life and the Nebraska Catholic Conference backed the 13-week initiative as a competing ballot initiative to one to put abortion rights in the constitution.
Thus far, every state that has voted on measures to protect abortion rights since the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade has adopted them, including Ohio and neighboring Kansas.
No surprise
Andi Curry Grubb of Planned Parenthood North Central States, which includes Nebraska, had no immediate comment other than to say it is “not surprising” that Ricketts would fund the effort.
He has said he would like to see abortion banned.
Grubb and other abortion rights advocates with the group Protect Our Rights have warned Nebraskans that the 13-week measure would not protect abortion rights, as some seem to believe. The group had no immediate comment Tuesday.
They say the legal language was written to let the Legislature restrict abortion further or ban it outright. The language would not let the Legislature make the proposed abortion ban less strict.
Competing initiative
The competing ballot initiative sought by Protect Our Rights would make abortion legal up until the time of fetal viability, when a fetus can live outside the womb, based on the opinion of a medical provider. That timing is typically at 22-24 weeks.
Advocates for additional abortion restrictions have argued the change sought by Protect Our Rights would cost young lives. Abortion rights advocates say Nebraska’s current ban of 12 weeks gestational age, adopted last year, and the Ricketts-pushed proposal at 13 weeks of pregnancy both put women’s health and bodily autonomy at risk.
Protect Our Rights reported raising $473,000 in its latest NADC report, through March 26. Much of that came as donations were funneled through local nonprofit groups who also are donating staff time, including Planned Parenthood, ACLU Nebraska and Nebraska Appleseed.
Both measures could make the November ballot.