June 25, 2012 — Personhood Ohio likely will fall short in its bid to place an amendment before voters this fall that would define life as beginning at fertilization, Slate's "The Slatest" reports.
With a July 4 deadline approaching, the group has only collected about 20,000 of the 385,000 signatures it would need for the measure to qualify for the November ballot (Hewitt, "The Slatest," Slate, 6/21).
Despite support from the national organization Personhood USA, which is based in Denver, the Ohio amendment failed to gain the backing of local antiabortion-rights groups, such as the Catholic Conference of Ohio and Ohio Right to Life.
Measures in Other States
Similar initiatives in Nevada and California also fell short of the required number of signatures this year.
However, personhood supporters believe they can meet the signature threshold in Montana and Colorado, which both have lower signature requirements than Ohio. Colorado voters rejected similar amendments in 2008 and 2010 (AP/Washington Post, 6/21).
Debra Ness, publisher & president, National Partnership
Andrea Friedman, associate editor & director of reproductive health programs, National Partnership
Marya Torrez, associate editor & senior reproductive health policy counsel, National Partnership
Melissa Safford, associate editor & policy advocate for reproductive health, National Partnership
Perry Sacks, assistant editor & health program associate, National Partnership
Cindy Romero, assistant editor & communications assistant, National Partnership
Justyn Ware, editor
Amanda Wolfe, editor-in-chief
Heather Drost, Hanna Jaquith, Marcelle Maginnis, Ashley Marchand and Michelle Stuckey, staff writers
Tucker Ball, director of new media, National Partnership