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Following a March attack in Longmont where a mother's unborn child was cut from her womb, Colorado's Senate President has introduced a fetal homicide鈥
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One of this November's statewide ballot questions may look familiar to Coloradans. For the third time since 2008 voters will decide the fate of an鈥
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Colorado voters will once again decide on an amendment that would give unborn babies the same constitutional and legal rights as a person. The measure is鈥
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Supporters of the personhood amendment filed a lawsuit Thursday in Denver District court as part of a last minute attempt to get the measure on the鈥
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The Secretary of State鈥檚 office says the Personhood amendment will not be on the Colorado ballot this November because supporters failed to gather enough鈥
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Since Republican Rep. Todd Akin first said the words "legitimate rape" last weekend, just about everyone in the Republican Party has condemned those comments. That includes vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan. But it's also put a spotlight on Ryan's anti-abortion legislation and voting record.
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Colorado voters will once again face a personhood measure on the November election ballot. Similar efforts were soundly defeated in 2008 and鈥
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Some foes of abortion haven't supported efforts to define legal personhood as beginning with the fertilization of a human egg because of concerns about unintended consequences.
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Voters in Mississippi have rejected an amendment that would have made it the first state to declare as part of its constitution that life begins at fertilization. As recently as a few weeks ago, the so-called personhood amendment was considered almost certain to pass.
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Colorado voters have twice rejected measures to define 鈥減ersonhood鈥 鈥 and now voters in Mississippi will have their say. An initiative on next week鈥檚鈥