Austin American-Statesman

Lawmakers approve banning abortion at ‘fetal heartbeat’

- By Barbara Rodriguez and Scott Stewart

Republican legislator­s sent Iowa’s governor a bill early Wednesday that would ban most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy, propelling the state overnight to the front of a push among conservati­ve statehouse­s jockeying to enact the nation’s most-restrictiv­e regulation­s on the procedure.

Critics say the so-called “heartbeat” bill, which now awaits the signature of anti-abortion GOP Gov. Kim Reynolds, would ban the medical procedure before some women even know they’re pregnant. That could set up the state for a legal challenge over its constituti­onality, including from the same federal appeals court that two years ago struck down similar legislatio­n approved in Arkansas and North Dakota.

Backers of the legislatio­n, which failed to get a single Democratic vote in either Iowa chamber, expressed hope it could challenge Roe vs. Wade, the landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling that establishe­d women have a right to terminate pregnancie­s until a fetus is viable. Conservati­ves say an influx of conservati­ve judicial appointmen­ts under President Donald Trump could make it a possibilit­y.

“Today we will begin this journey as Iowa becomes ground zero, now nationally, in the life movement,” Sen. Rick Bertrand, a Republican from Sioux City, said during the floor debate.

Erin Davison-Rippey, a spokeswoma­n for Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, said in a statement that the legislatio­n was an “embarrassm­ent” for the state.

“By passing an intentiona­lly unconstitu­tional bill, Iowa Republican­s have declared that they do not care about the foundation­al values of our state, or Iowa’s future,” she said. “They do not care how much taxpayer money will be spent on a lawsuit, they don’t care how many women’s lives will be damaged because of inadequate access to care, or how many families may choose to go elsewhere because Iowa is no longer a state where they are safe to live and work.”

The House began debate over the measure Tuesday, voting it out shortly before midnight with six Republican­s there opposing it. The Senate then picked it up, with approval shortly after 2 a.m. Wednesday. The nearly backto-back votes come as lawmakers seek to pass a state budget and tax cuts later this week.

Although Reynolds hasn’t said publicly if she’ll sign the bill into law, press secretary Brenna Smith said in an email the governor “is 100 percent pro-life and will never stop fighting for the unborn.”

Several states have attempted to advance abortion bans in recent years. Mississipp­i passed a law earlier this year banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, but it’s on hold after a court challenge. The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear similar heartbeat bills North Dakota and Arkansas approved in 2013 that were rejected by the appeals court.

The Iowa legislatio­n contains some exemptions, including allowing abortions after a detectable heartbeat to save a pregnant woman’s life or in some cases of rape and incest. Another provision prohibits some uses of fetal tissue, with exemptions for research. A woman would have to report a rape within 45 days to law enforcemen­t or a physician to qualify for an exemption to the abortion ban. Incest must be reported within 140 days to receive an exemption.

Rep. Mary Wolfe, a Democrat from Clinton, said that “absolutely nothing” would stop a “desperate” woman from lying to a physician, who cannot investigat­e whether a pregnancy is the result of incest and cannot report it to law enforcemen­t. Conversely, she said a child who is raped but delays reporting it until showing signs of pregnancy could be denied an abortion.

“Children who have been brutally raped, who are scared to death, who have little tiny bones and maybe forcing their rapist’s baby out of there is not in their best interest — too bad for them under this law,” Wolfe said.

The bill provides immunity to women receiving abortions but not to doctors who perform them. Their licenses could be revoked for violations, and prosecutor­s could consider criminal charges against them. That’s not addressed by the bill.

Republican­s at the Iowa Capitol have long sought to approve legislatio­n that would further restrict abortion, and their flip of the state Senate chamber in the 2016 election gave them a trifecta of GOP power for the first time in nearly 20 years. Last session, they passed a bill banning most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, which is in effect.

A provision in that legislatio­n requiring a threeday waiting period for abortions — among the longest wait periods in the country — was challenged in court. It remains on hold amid litigation being considered by the state Supreme Court.

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