Americans United for Life (AUL) has released their fifth
annual ranking of the most and least Pro-Life states.
AUL works with state legislators across the
nation to pass effective Pro-Life laws. This new national ranking of states shows Michigan in the lead,
followed by Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Kansas.
AUL's criteria covers each state's treatment of all
Pro-Life issues and the final ranking depends largely on each state's enactment of prudent
and well-supported laws limiting abortions as much as the Supreme Court has allowed. Among the laws that AUL looks for are informed
consent, parental involvement for minors, abortion facility regulations, and abortion
funding limits.
Illinois falls far
short in all of these categories, leading to a ranking of 38th out of the 50 states. About the only positive to be drawn from this
ranking is not falling into the bottom 10 yet.
Illinois has no informed consent law
on abortion so women are not given any facts about the adverse consequences of abortion
before receiving one. Illinois has a parental
notification of abortion law, but it still sits dormant waiting for a decision from
Federal Judge David Coar on removal of the Federal injunction preventing enforcement of
the law. Meanwhile, abortions on out-of-state
minors continue to rise because Illiniois is a haven for bypassing the parental
involvement laws in effect in all surrounding states.
Only vigorous efforts from Pro-Life lobbyists and concerned citizens prevented
passage of a bill in 2007 that would have revoked parental notification even before it
could take effect.
It has been stated that
veterinary clinics are more regulated than abortion clinics in Illinois. Weak
abortion clinic regulations in Illinois can be attributed to a 1989 settlement accepted by
pro-abortion Attorney General Neil Hartigan in a lawsuit filed by Dr. Richard Ragsdale, a Rockford, IL physician, against
Dr. Bernard Turnock, the state's Public Health Director, challenging Illinois abortion
regulations. lllinois taxpayers are required to fund so-called
"medically necessary" abortions, essentially funding abortion-on-demand given
the Federal courts' broad definition of "health" in the context of abortion.
Beyond abortion, some positives do
exist under Illinois criminal law. The
killing of an unborn child at any stage of gestation is defined as a form of homicide and
Illinois defines nonfatal assaults on an unborn child as a crime. Illinois law also requires that viable
infants who survive an abortion must be given appropriate medical care. These may be about the only positives keeping the
Pro-Life ranking of Illinois above the bottom 10 states.
AUL lists a number of opportunities
for improvement of Illinois laws, including informed consent, regulation of abortion
clinics, and better protection of patients end-of-life decisions. Unfortunately, with the current anti-life
composition of the Illinois legislature, it is unlikely that real progress can be made on any of these issues in
2008.