- United States
- Ariz.
- Letter
Oppose HB2144: Fetal Personhood Through Child Support Expansion
To: Rep. Gutierrez, Rep. Mathis
From: A verified voter in Tucson, AZ
January 19
I urge you to oppose HB2144, scheduled for consideration in the House Judiciary Committee this Wednesday. This bill, sponsored by Representative Justin Olson, would establish court-ordered child support for what it terms a "preborn child," beginning from the date of a positive pregnancy test confirmed by a licensed healthcare professional.
This legislation represents a dangerous expansion of fetal personhood doctrine that grants fetuses the same legal rights as born individuals. While proponents may frame this as financial support for pregnant people, the legal implications extend far beyond child support. Establishing legal personhood from the moment of a confirmed pregnancy test creates a framework that could be used to restrict reproductive healthcare access, criminalize pregnancy outcomes, and subordinate the rights and bodily autonomy of pregnant people to the legal status of a fetus.
The bill amends Arizona Revised Statutes Title 25, Article 320, fundamentally altering family law in ways that could have unintended consequences for pregnant people facing medical complications, miscarriage, or other pregnancy-related health decisions. Medical professionals could face legal uncertainty when providing standard pregnancy care if a fetus holds equivalent legal status to their patient.
Arizona already has mechanisms to address financial needs during pregnancy through existing family law and public assistance programs. Creating a separate legal category that assigns personhood based on a pregnancy test is not a neutral policy choice. It establishes legal precedent that undermines the established medical and legal understanding that personhood begins at birth.
I ask that you vote against HB2144 in committee this Wednesday. This bill prioritizes ideology over sound policy and threatens to create legal complications that would harm pregnant people across Arizona. Our state needs policies that support families without compromising reproductive rights or creating legal frameworks that treat pregnancy as a separate legal entity with rights that compete against those of the pregnant person.