Yes, Abortion Amendments Do Invalidate Pro-Life Laws: Just Look at Missouri

A significant pro-life legal battle is unfolding in Missouri, and it demonstrates exactly what’s at stake when an abortion amendment is approved and added to a state constitution.

At issue is whether states may continue to enforce longstanding health and safety regulations governing abortionists or whether those legal protections will be deemed unconstitutional under adopted state constitutional language.

In 2024, Missouri approved Amendment 3, which enshrined abortion in the state constitution. Following its passage, Planned Parenthood filed a legal challenge to invalidate numerous statutes governing abortion.

The lawsuit went beyond targeting laws related to when a woman can get an abortion. It sought to repeal provisions related to informed consent requirements, chemical abortion protocols, waiting periods and facility safety requirements.

The 221-page complaint also asked the court to issue an injunction to block the laws from being enforced while the case is litigated.

After a ten-day trial in January, the trial judge ruled largely in Planned Parenthood’s favor in June 2026.

The decision invalidated many abortion-related statutes, including Missouri’s 72-hour waiting period, restrictions on chemical abortion and several licensing and operational standards for abortion facilities.

The court preserved a small number of medical safeguards, like in-person visits, to rule out an ectopic pregnancy and confirm the gestational age of the baby.

Missouri recently appealed the decision to the state Supreme Court.

The central issue before the court is not just whether abortion is constitutionally protected, but whether a constitutional “right” to abortion bars the state from maintaining reasonable health and safety standards for abortionists.

Impact on Abortion Policy

This case demonstrates a number of important effects these developments have on abortion policy in a state.

First, the long-term impact of passing unrestricted abortion amendments.

Pro-life advocates repeatedly warned that passing an abortion amendment would result in common-sense laws meant to protect the public being repealed. Abortion activists denied those claims. Pro-life advocates were right, and abortion activists were intentionally denying the truth about the far-reaching impact of enshrining abortion access in the state constitution.

Second, this case also illustrates how quickly the legal landscape can change.

Laws meant to protect the public, enacted over many years by the people’s elected representatives, were invalidated in a single ruling by one court.

Abortion Amendment Back on the Ballot

For the first time nationwide, state voters will be asked to vote on their recently enacted abortion amendment this fall in Missouri.

The initiative to enshrine abortion was passed by a very narrow margin in 2024 — 51% to 48%.

This new ballot measure would allow abortion until 12 weeks’ gestation and would allow exceptions in the cases of rape and incest.

The measure was referred to the ballot by the state legislature and not only repeals the 2024 abortion amendment but would also ban opposite sex transgender surgeries for minors.

Latest public polling on this measure from February 2026 shows support at 47%, opposition at 40% and undecided at 12%.

Missouri law requires all constitutional amendments earn a simple majority (50% plus 1) to become law.

The case isComprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, et al. v. State of Missouri.

The Daily Citizen will continue following this developing story.

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