Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Louisiana abortion measure rescinded

Sponsor pulls bill after revamp vote

- KEVIN MCGILL Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Holly Ramer of The Associated Press.

NEW ORLEANS — The sponsor of a bill that would have subjected Louisiana women to murder charges for having abortions abruptly pulled the proposal from debate Thursday night after House members voted 65-26 to totally revamp the legislatio­n, eliminatin­g the criminal penalties.

“This is a thorny political question, but we all know that it is actually very simple. Abortion is murder,” Rep. Danny McCormick, a Republican from Oil City, proclaimed as he opened debate. He noted that a majority of Louisiana lawmakers in the heavily Republican Legislatur­e say they are anti-abortion, and briefly chided those abortion opponents who also oppose his bill. “We’re faltering and trying to explain it away.”

But McCormick’s measure had drawn increasing­ly strong opposition from many anti-abortion stalwarts. Gov. John Bel Edwards, an anti-abortion Democrat, said he would veto it.

Louisiana Right to Life, the Louisiana Conference of Catholic Bishops, and the National Right to Life Committee were among the prominent anti-abortion opponents of the measure.

“To suggest that a woman would be jailed for an abortion is simply absurd,” Edwards said Wednesday.

McCormick disagreed, saying a woman who has an abortion should be in the same legal position as a woman who takes the life of a child after birth. “When I give equal protection to the unborn, that’s the possibilit­y,” he said Wednesday evening.

The House had not yet started debating the controvers­ial legislatio­n when the building was temporaril­y evacuated Thursday after the speaker interrupte­d proceeding­s and said an unknown, unclaimed package had been found in the capitol’s Memorial Hall — a gathering area between House and Senate Chambers.

McCormick’s bill came under high scrutiny in light of the leak of a draft of a U.S. Supreme Court opinion earlier this month indicating the high court is preparing to overturn decisions upholding a constituti­onal right to abortion.

McCormick’s bill also declared that any federal law, regulation or court ruling that allows abortion is void and that any judge who blocks enforcemen­t of the bill’s provisions could be impeached.

Members of the committee that advanced the bill last week expressed doubt about its constituti­onality. Edwards called it “patently unconstitu­tional.”

Edwards joined critics of the bill saying it criminaliz­es some types of contracept­ion and parts of the in vitro fertilizat­ion process. McCormick on Thursday said forms of contracept­ion that don’t destroy a fertilized egg would not be affected.

And he disputes that the bill would newly criminaliz­e some aspects of in vitro fertilizat­ion, pointing to state law that already grants rights to an “in vitro fertilized human ovum.”

Louisiana already has laws on the books criminaliz­ing abortion, including a “trigger law” ensuring that it will be a crime if the Supreme Court reverses the Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 ruling establishi­ng abortion rights.

The statutes appear to exempt women from prosecutio­n.

McCormick said the existing laws are inadequate to give fetuses equal protection under law.

“This is a debate we need to have in Louisiana,” he said. “There are good people on both sides of the debate.”

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