A trigger law is a law that is unenforceable but may achieve enforceability if a key change in circumstances occurs.
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In the United States, thirteen states, Arkansas, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming, enacted trigger laws that would automatically ban abortion in the first and second trimesters if the landmark case Roe v. Wade were overturned. When Roe v. Wade was overturned on 24 June 2022, some of these laws were in effect, and presumably enforceable, immediately. Other states' trigger laws took effect 30 days after the overturn date, and others take effect upon certification by either the governor or attorney general. Illinois formerly had a trigger law (enacted in 1975) but repealed it in 2017.Sarah Mansur, Bill removes trigger from abortion law, but impact unclear , Chicago Daily Law Bulletin (1 May 2017).John Dempsey, Rauner signing of abortion bill angers conservatives , WLS-AM (29 September 2017).
Eight states, among them Alabama, Arizona, West Virginia, and Wisconsin, as well as the already mentioned Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Texas, still have their pre- Roe v. Wade abortion bans on the law books. In North Carolina, a prohibition on abortions after 20 weeks (excepting medical emergencies) was passed in 1973 but unenforceable due to Roe v. Wade and a court ruling that it was unconstitutional until it was reinstated by U.S. District Judge William Osteen Jr. in August 2022. According to a 2019 Contraception Journal study, the reversal of Roe v. Wade and implementation of trigger laws (as well as other states considered highly likely to ban abortion), "In the year following a reversal, increases in travel distance are estimated to prevent 93,546 to 143,561 women from accessing abortion".
The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact uses a trigger portion in which the interstate compact comes into effect upon accession by enough states amounting to 270 electoral votes.
California passed Proposition 50 in 2025, which allows the California Legislature to pass a temporary congressional district map only in response to other states passing mid-decade maps of their own. The Virginia General Assembly placed similar legislation on the state ballot in 2026.
In 2024, North Dakota passed Initiated Measure 1, which mandates age limits on candidates running for election to either house of Congress from the state. The amendment remains unenforceable under U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton (1995).
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