COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) 鈥 The wording of a proposed constitutional amendment on Ohio's fall ballot to ensure abortion rights seems straightforward: It would enshrine the right 鈥渢o make and carry out one's own reproductive decisions.鈥

Yet as the campaigning for and against the nation's latest tug-of-war over abortion begins in earnest this weekend, voters are getting a different message from the measure's opponents. They are characterizing it as threatening a wide range of parental rights.

鈥淎s parents, it鈥檚 our worst nightmare," one particularly ominous online ad funded by Protect Women Ohio, the opposition campaign, says of November's Issue 1.

That ad suggests the amendment would let minors end pregnancies without parental permission, calling it 鈥渁 potential reality so grim it鈥檚 hard to even imagine.鈥 Another suggests parents would have no say in minors' 鈥漵ex change surgery."

It's no surprise that anti-abortion groups opposed to the amendment are promoting that message. They are trying to flip the script in how they talk to voters after a string of losses in statewide ballot fights since the U.S. Supreme Court last year.

Measures protecting access to abortion in Democratic- and Republican-leaning states, including California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana and Vermont.

Data collected last year by AP VoteCast, a broad survey of the electorate, showed that 59% of Ohio voters believe abortion should generally be legal. Just last month, Ohio voters a measure that GOP lawmakers placed on a special election ballot that would have raised the threshold to pass constitutional amendments to 60% 鈥 a proposal to defeating the abortion amendment.

Before what is expected to be the highest profile national issue in November's elections, Ohio also is serving as a testing ground for political messaging headed into next year's presidential race. Abortion rights groups are trying to qualify initiatives in more states in 2024, potentially including the perennial battleground of Arizona.

To try to reverse their string of losses, anti-abortion groups are using the Ohio campaign to test arguments over parental rights and gender-related health care counterpunch.

鈥淚t鈥檚 clear that the misinformation about abortion is not winning,鈥 said Elisabeth Smith, director of state policy and advocacy at the Center for Reproductive Rights. 鈥淚t didn鈥檛 win in Michigan. It didn鈥檛 win in Vermont. It didn鈥檛 win in Kansas. It didn鈥檛 win in Kentucky. So instead, we are seeing anti-abortion factions in search for that new, winning talking point.鈥

Legal experts disagree over what effect, if any, the Ohio amendment would have on parents' ability to control their children's access to abortion and gender-related health care, including surgery.

The points of contention are in the measure's fine print. Where the amendment says 鈥渆very individual has a right to make and carry out one's own reproductive decisions,鈥 opponents focus on the words 鈥渋ndividual鈥 and 鈥渞eproductive鈥 as potential openings.

Mehek Cooke, a Republican lawyer working with Protect Women Ohio, said the amendment's authors were intentionally vague when they used the word 鈥渋ndividual,鈥 allowing it to apply to any gender and to both adults and children.

鈥淭his is very deliberate, and I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 open to interpretation,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very clear 鈥榓n individual鈥 means both.鈥

Ohio already has a parental consent law governing minors' access to abortion. Cooke said the amendment's wording means that would become unconstitutional, along with minors' access to gender-related health care.

Tracy Thomas, a University of Akron law professor who directs the school鈥檚 Center for Constitutional Law, was among several legal scholars who said that reading of the amendment is a stretch.

鈥淚t is a straw argument, a false argument that they're setting up,鈥 she said. 鈥淐hildren do have constitutional rights, but we have lots of examples in the law, both state and federal, where these children鈥檚 rights are limited. Marriage is a good example.鈥

To be overturned, Ohio's existing parental consent law would have to be challenged in court and struck down by the state Supreme Court, which has a conservative majority, said Jessie Hill, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University and a consultant to the Issue 1 campaign.

Hill said similar arguments related to parental consent were made before Michigan鈥檚 vote last year to codify abortion rights in that state鈥檚 constitution, and 鈥渘one of these things have come to pass.鈥

Ohio is among 36 states that require parental involvement in a minor鈥檚 decision to have an abortion, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization that supports legal access to abortion.

Dan Kobil, a law professor at Capital University in Columbus, said courts upheld Ohio's parental consent law when abortion was legal nationwide 鈥渁s being consistent with a woman鈥檚 right to terminate a pre-viability pregnancy, as long as it maintained a provision for a judicial bypass in extreme cases.鈥

Because of that, he said it's reasonable to think that parents would retain the right to be involved in reproductive decisions involving their children if voters approve the abortion amendment.

The amendment makes no reference to gender-related health care, and it's supporters say the reason is simple: It's not about that.

The proposal cites reproductive decisions 鈥渋ncluding but not limited to鈥 contraception, fertility treatment, continuing one's own pregnancy, miscarriage and abortion.

Opponents are making a case to voters that such phrasing could open the door to minors' gender-related health care decisions being constitutionally protected from parental interference.

Frank Scaturro, a constitutional lawyer working with Protect Women Ohio, said legal interpretations under the Roe v. Wade standard were dealing with a document 鈥 the U.S. Constitution 鈥 鈥渢hat says nothing at all specifically about abortion, or even more broadly about reproduction.鈥 He said that under the Ohio amendment, anything that alters the human reproductive system could be understood as a 鈥渞eproductive decision.鈥

David Cohen, a law professor at Drexel University, called such interpretations of the measure 鈥渇ar-fetched.鈥

鈥淭his is a very clear provision that is based in, or connected to, abortion and pregnancy, and that is a very different topic than gender-affirming care,鈥 he said. "I can imagine some gender-affirming care might be related to fertility treatment, but that鈥檚 a very specific part of gender-affirming care. This is a scare tactic to try and make this about that.鈥

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Fernando reported from Chicago. Associated Press writer Ali Swenson in New York contributed to this report.

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The Associated Press鈥痳eceives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP鈥檚 democracy initiative . The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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