Wyoming Governor Signs Six‑Week 'Fetal Heartbeat' Abortion Ban Into Law
Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon on Monday signed a law banning abortions once embryonic cardiac activity can be detected—typically around six weeks of pregnancy—making Wyoming the fifth state with such a restriction, alongside Florida, Georgia, Iowa and South Carolina. The measure includes exceptions only to preserve a woman from “imminent peril” that endangers her life or health, and pointedly omits exceptions for rape or incest, a gap Gordon acknowledged in a letter to lawmakers as a departure from his own stated pro‑life stance. Gordon also warned the statute is “very likely” to trigger new litigation, noting the Wyoming Supreme Court struck down a broader near‑total abortion ban in January and calling this another “likely fragile legal effort” that may not produce “lasting, durable policy.” Wellspring Health Access, the state’s only clinic providing both procedural and medication abortions, immediately pledged to challenge the law in court and began referring patients further along in pregnancy to out‑of‑state providers, underscoring the practical effect on access in a rural state where its lone clinic was firebombed in 2022. The move deepens the post‑Roe legal patchwork in which 13 states now bar abortion throughout pregnancy and several others have six‑week bans, and it sets up another test of how far state courts will allow lawmakers to go in restricting reproductive care under state constitutions.
📌 Key Facts
- Gov. Mark Gordon signed the six‑week 'fetal heartbeat' abortion ban into law on Monday in Wyoming.
- The law bans abortions after detectable embryonic cardiac activity, with exceptions only to avert imminent peril to the woman’s life or health and none for rape or incest.
- Gordon warned the law is likely to face court challenges, after the Wyoming Supreme Court struck down a near‑total abortion ban earlier this year.
- Wellspring Health Access, Wyoming’s only clinic offering both procedural and medication abortions, said it will challenge the ban and has started referring later‑term patients to other states.
- Wyoming recorded 625 abortions in 2024, and the clinic reports providing 303 abortions in 2025 before this new restriction.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2022, 40.2% of reported abortions in the United States occurred at or before six weeks' gestation, meaning approximately 59.8% occurred after six weeks.
In 2022, among areas reporting race data, non-Hispanic Black women accounted for 39.2% of abortions, non-Hispanic White women for 30.5%, Hispanic women for 24.5%, and other groups for 5.8%, while Black individuals comprise about 13.6% of the U.S. population.
Abortion Surveillance — United States, 2022 — CDC MMWR
In 2020, 41% of people obtaining abortions in the US had incomes below the federal poverty level, and 30% had incomes between 100% and 199% of the federal poverty level.
Abortion in the United States — Guttmacher Institute
An estimated 64,565 pregnancies resulted from rape in 14 states with abortion bans from July 2022 to January 2024, with over 90% occurring in states without rape exceptions.
Study estimates 64,000 pregnancies from rape in states that enacted abortion bans post-Roe — PBS
In 2023, the maternal mortality rate for Black women in the US was 49.4 per 100,000 live births, over three times the rate for White women at 14.9 per 100,000.
States with abortion bans saw a 3.3 times higher likelihood of maternal death among Black mothers compared to states without bans, controlling for prior health conditions.
The Impact of Restrictive State Abortion Laws — Milbank Memorial Fund
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