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The Mountain West News Bureau is a collaboration between Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNC in Colorado, KUNM in New Mexico, KUNR in Nevada, Nevada Public Radio, the O'Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West in Montana and Wyoming Public Media, with support from affiliate stations across the region.

Two conservative women started with similar beliefs about abortion. Then they got pregnant

Photos of two women. On the left, a woman sits on a brown, leather couch with a box in front of her. On the right, a silver-haired woman with glasses sits in a white chair with baby clothes stacked behind her.
Hanna Merzbach
/
Wyoming Public Media

Beliefs about whether abortions should be legal are deeply entrenched. As restrictions are being challenged in courts across our region, two women on opposite sides of the issue shared what led them to what they believe.

For both of them, it began with a pregnancy.

‘It was a baby’

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 Marti Halverson sat in the community center in her two-square-mile community of Etna in western Wyoming. She was sporting a silver bob with a fringe of bangs and a black vest with a distinct gold pin on it.

“It says GOP,” Halverson said. “I think we’re pretty clear I’m a Republican.”

She said she’s been one since her father gave the information for her birth certificate.

“He said, ‘Yeah, boy, girl, boy, girl. Where do I put Republican?’” Halverson said proudly, as if she’s told that story hundreds of times.

Hanging from the pin was a pair of tiny, gold feet.

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“We wear this to remind ourselves that these perfectly formed feet are 10 weeks after conception,” Halverson said.

 A woman with silver hair and oval glasses sits in a white chair, with a closet of baby clothes to her left.
Hanna Merzbach
/
Wyoming Public Media
Inside the Etna community center, Marti Halverson sits in the Azar House Pregnancy Resource Center, a Christian-run center that provides free counseling to pregnant women and items such as baby clothes and strollers.

She’s the leader of advocacy group Wyoming Right to Life and a former state lawmaker. Halverson is a staunch abortion opponent, but it wasn’t always that way.

“It was in 1973 that I first got pregnant,” she recalled. “I was 21.”

She and her husband hadn’t planned to start a family for a couple years.

“But accidents happen and my doctor gleefully informed me that I could have an abortion,” Halverson said. “I had to ask her, ‘What is an abortion?’”

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Just a few months earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court had recognized womens’ right to an abortion in the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, yet this had not been a topic in Halverson’s household.

“When she explained it to me, I was mortified,” Halverson said. “Even though our baby wasn't planned. It was a baby. It was there. There was no getting around it, no escaping it, and killing it was out of the question.”

She quickly found another doctor and went through with her pregnancy.

A baby doll in a blue floral dress on a wooden changing table below framed written quotes saying things like “Commit to the Lord.”
Hanna Merzbach
/
Wyoming Public Media
A baby doll lies on a changing table below Christian proverbs at Etna’s Azar House Pregnancy Resource Center, which Marti Halverson supports.

Shuffling through a stack of pamphlets and studies that support her beliefs, Halverson said her Christian faith has nothing to do with her opposition to abortion.

“It is science driven,” she said. “Life begins at conception.”

But that’s something Wyomingites are debating. Abortion remains legal in the state, but the Wyoming Supreme Court is considering if the government can ban the practice in most cases. It’s one of many states, including Utah and Idaho, where abortion access has been reconsidered after Roe was overturned three years ago.

‘This is my daughter’s legacy’

Another Wyoming resident, Riata Little Walker, used to be opposed to abortion.

“ I would've always said that I was pro-life with exceptions for rape, incest and danger to the mother,” Walker recalled, while sitting cross-legged on her brown leather sectional on the east side of the state in Casper.

She said she was raised Catholic and conservative on a family ranch, but her beliefs were challenged in 2020, when she and her husband were pregnant with their first daughter.

“I got a call from my doctor,” Walker said. “She said, ‘You’re now high-risk.’”

Walker had just had a 21-week scan.

A woman in a turquoise blue shirt sits on a leather couch holding a hold heart and a teddy bear, with a box open in front of her.
Hanna Merzbach
/
Wyoming Public Media
Riata Little Walker sits on her couch in Casper, Wyoming, with a memory box in honor of her first daughter. It includes her teddy bear and a heart-shaped urn with her ashes.

“She had heart defects,” Walker said. “We were told, if you make it to term and if she survives birth, then she'll have a very complex existence … it really hit me that, oh my gosh, she's never leaving a hospital.”

Then the young couple was given the same option as Halverson.

“Ultimately we made the decision based off of her heart,” Walker explained. “She did not deserve to suffer and die in a painful way.”

So Walker and her husband decided to have an abortion and induce labor early.

“I held her in her final few minutes of her life,” Walker said. “We had her baptized right there.”

A matter of freedom

She now has two healthy kids, aged 4 and 1, but keeps her first daughter close in a little bronze heart-shaped urn.

“Google AI says that I'm an abortion advocate … something I never thought that I would ever be,” Walker said. “In my mind, this is my daughter's legacy.”

She said that if she wants people like her to have the right to choose, everyone should have that right.

“And so now I say I err on the side of freedom,” she explained.

For Halverson, the issue is also about that same traditional conservative value of freedom.

“What about the freedom for the baby?” she asked. “What about the freedom for that life?”

Wyoming justices have until late summer to make a decision on the state’s abortion bans.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Nevada Public Radio, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, KUNC in Colorado and KANW in New Mexico, with support from affiliate stations across the region. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Leave a tip: Hanna.Merzbach@uwyo.edu
Hanna is the Mountain West News Bureau reporter based in Teton County.