

House Bill 441
Allows for the criminal prosecution of abortion as murder from the point of fertilization.
The 2025 legislative session has officially come to a close. This year, extremist lawmakers targeted librarians, college campuses, voters, LGBTQ+ people, and more. State-level legislation in Georgia and elsewhere mirrors proposed policies from Washington aiming to divide us and undermine our shared experiences across all races, genders, and sexualities. Throughout the session, the ACLU of Georgia and our partners fought tirelessly against these efforts—defeating much of the harmful legislation and standing strong in defense of civil liberties.
CHECK OUT THE IMPORTANT WINS FROM THIS YEAR AND WHAT'S AHEAD
ACLU of Georgia’s legislative agenda for 2025 ranges from defending free speech and privacy to advancing reproductive justice, LGBTQ+ rights, immigration reform, criminal legal reform, and voting rights.
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Each year, we review hundreds of bills introduced in the Georgia Legislature for civil liberties implications, identifying those bills that we are going to advocate for or against and developing strategies accordingly.
We educate legislators and the public about ACLU-GA positions, draft legislation on priority issues, lobby on bills affecting civil liberties, testify or arrange for testimony on bills, and build coalitions to pursue pro-active legislative initiatives or battle anti-civil liberties legislation.
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Allows for the criminal prosecution of abortion as murder from the point of fertilization.
Expands protections for GA consumer privacy and data.
Adds a procedure for the removal of members of the State Election Board who were elected when the General Assembly is not in session.
Prevents admission of "creative expression" in trial unless it is literal, relates directly to the facts of the crime, and offers distinct probative value.