Here’s a concise summary of the most significant abortion-related developments from the past seven days, drawn from court rulings, state legislation, international votes, and new data reports. Coverage reflects ongoing post-Dobbs tensions, with actions in both restrictive and protective directions.

U.S. State-Level Actions and Court Rulings

  • South Dakota enacts stricter anti-abortion measures: On March 20, Gov. Larry Rhoden signed three bills into law at a pregnancy resource center. They make it a felony to dispense or advertise abortion pills (including related items), clarify the legal definition of abortion, and require public schools to show prenatal development videos. The governor called it a strengthening of “pro-life laws.” southdakotasearchlight.com
  • Georgia: First murder charge tied to medication abortion post-6-week ban: A woman was charged with murder after a medication abortion. This is the first such case since Georgia’s heartbeat law took effect. The story sparked widespread discussion about enforcement of bans and prosecutorial approaches. youtube.com +1
  • Indiana court grants permanent religious-freedom exemption to abortion ban: A Marion County judge issued a permanent injunction blocking enforcement of the state’s ban against plaintiffs (and a certified class) when it substantially burdens sincerely held religious beliefs. The ruling, which followed an earlier March decision, is being appealed and highlights growing use of religious-liberty arguments against bans. aclu-in.org +1
  • Kansas lawmakers advance constitutional ban proposal: Legislators continued debating multiple restriction bills, including a resolution to amend the state constitution to ban abortion at any stage. kwch.com
  • Wyoming abortion-rights groups seek pre-trial ruling: Advocates asked a judge to strike down three existing restrictions (plus the new Human Heartbeat Act that took effect March 9) without a full trial, arguing the laws unnecessarily burden access. wyomingpublicmedia.org
  • Broader crackdown on out-of-state abortion pills: States with bans are introducing or advancing measures to target medication abortions mailed from providers in other states. pbs.org

National Data Update

  • Guttmacher Institute releases 2025 abortion incidence report: New full-year data (released in the past day) shows out-of-state travel for abortions declined, while telehealth provision to residents of total-ban states rose from 74,000 in 2024 to 91,000 in 2025. Overall provision in non-ban states dipped slightly. guttmacher.org

International Developments

  • UK House of Lords advances abortion decriminalization and pardons: On or around March 19, peers voted 185-145 to approve an amendment decriminalizing abortion in England and Wales (while keeping the 24-week clinical limit for doctors). The measure also paves the way for pardons and record expungement for women previously convicted of abortion-related offenses amid rising prosecutions for self-managed or miscarriage cases. A BBC report this week also highlighted growing anti-abortion activism among younger Britons. oneill.law.georgetown.edu +1

Other stories circulating included celebrity commentary (e.g., singer Zara Larsson losing a deal over an abortion-related joke) and ongoing political debates, but the above represent the primary legislative, judicial, and data-driven developments. tiktok.com

Abortion remains a highly active policy and legal area at both state and federal levels, with 2026 ballot measures already shaping up in several states. For the latest on any specific story, check the linked sources.

Source: Grok on X

For all who have sinned without the law will also perish without the law, and all who have sinned under the law will be judged by the law.
Romans 2:12

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