Politics & Government

KY legislator files bill to treat abortion like homicide. It faces long odds

Rep. Josh Calloway (R- Irvington) completes a Commonwealth of Kentucky 2025 Regular Sessions General Assembly form on the House floor during regular sessions on Wednesday, February 12, 2025, at the Kentucky State capitol in Frankfort, Ky.
Rep. Josh Calloway (R- Irvington) completes a Commonwealth of Kentucky 2025 Regular Sessions General Assembly form on the House floor during regular sessions on Wednesday, February 12, 2025, at the Kentucky State capitol in Frankfort, Ky. tpoullard@herald-leader.com

Abortion in Kentucky would be treated like a homicide under a bill proposed Friday by social conservative legislator Rep. Josh Calloway, R-Irvington. But if recent history and another legislator interested in the issue are any indication, don’t expect the bill to move.

House Bill 690 would supersede Kentucky’s current laws around fetal homicide and assault, and add provisions putting providers and potentially mothers at risk of legal liability for homicide or assault if an abortion is performed.

The bill redefines “person” and “human being” in Kentucky’s homicide and assault statutes to include an “unborn child” from fertilization until live birth, thereby subjecting conduct causing the death or injury of an unborn child to the same criminal laws that apply to born persons.

“In a prosecution under this chapter where the victim is an unborn child, enforcement shall be subject to the same legal principles as would apply to the homicide of a person who had been born alive,” the bill reads.

Previously filed abortion bills

Rep. Ken Fleming, R-Louisville, is no stranger to the abortion debate in Kentucky. He previously filed a bill to add rape, incest and some nonviable pregnancy exceptions to Kentucky’s near-total abortion

Fleming told the Herald-Leader Friday he hadn’t yet read Calloway’s bill, but it faces long odds.

“I think what’s been done in the past is probably a good reflection of what will be done in the future,” Fleming said.

Fleming added that legislature has not expressed much appetite to change Kentucky’s statutes on abortion at all. That comes in spite of Democrats, and more moderate Republicans like Fleming, pushing to add exceptions.

Rep. Emily Callaway, R-Louisville, filed a similar bill to Calloway’s in 2023, but that went nowhere.

“My sense in talking to the Republican caucus is there’s not really an appetite to address a lot of abortion issues,” Fleming said.

Calloway could not immediately be reached for comment.

This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 1:10 PM.

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Austin Horn
Lexington Herald-Leader
Austin Horn is a politics reporter for the Lexington Herald-Leader. He previously worked for the Frankfort State Journal and National Public Radio. Horn has roots in both Woodford and Martin Counties.
Hannah Pinski
Lexington Herald-Leader
Hannah covers Kentucky politics, including the legislature and statewide constitutional offices, for the Lexington Herald-Leader. She joined the newspaper in December 2025 after covering Kentucky politics for the Louisville Courier Journal for almost two years. Hannah graduated from The University of Iowa in 2023 where she double-majored in Journalism and Music and minored in Political Science. 
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