Chattanooga Times Free Press

GOP-led states testing boundaries on abortions

- BY RYAN J. FOLEY

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Republican­s who control a majority of the nation’s statehouse­s are considerin­g a wide range of abortion legislatio­n that could test the government’s legal ability to restrict a woman’s right to terminate pregnancy.

The Mississipp­i House passed a bill Friday that would make the state the only one to ban all abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. In Missouri, lawmakers heard testimony earlier in the week on a bill that would ban abortions after 20 weeks.

The Ohio House is expected to consider bills, already passed in the Senate, that would prohibit the most common type of procedure used to end pregnancie­s after 13 weeks and require fetal remains be buried or cremated.

Abortion is a perennial hot-button issue in statehouse­s across the country. Republican­controlled states have passed hundreds of bills since 2011 restrictin­g access to the procedure while Democratic-led states have taken steps in the other direction.

The early weeks of this year’s state legislativ­e sessions have seen a flurry of activity around the issue. It comes as activists on both sides say they expect the U.S. Supreme Court to soon consider a question that remains unclear: How far can states go in restrictin­g abortion in the interest of preserving and promoting fetal life?

The state bills debated since the start of the year “are all tests designed to see how far government power to legislate on behalf of a fetus can reach,” said Jessica Mason Pieklo, who has been tracking legislatio­n as the senior legal analyst for Rewire, a website that promotes views supporting abortion rights.

She said the outcome will determine whether states can legally ban abortion after a specific time period and outlaw specific medical procedures. Advocates for abortion rights say those strategies undermine the Supreme Court’s 1973 ruling that women have the right to terminate pregnancie­s until a fetus is viable.

In Utah, critics have warned a pending bill to prevent doctors from performing abortions on the basis of a Down syndrome diagnosis is unconstitu­tional. But its co-sponsor, Republican state Sen. Curt Bramble, said he is willing to defend the bill in court because its goal is to protect unborn children.

“There are times if the Supreme Court got it wrong, it is appropriat­e to push back,” said Bramble, an accountant from Provo.

The anti-abortion bills have drawn opposition from women who say they have made the excruciati­ng choice to terminate a pregnancy, often after discoverin­g serious fetal abnormalit­ies.

“A 20-week abortion ban sounds OK, but if that gets passed, what’s next — 18 weeks, 15 weeks? At what point does it make abortion truly illegal?” said Robin Utz of St. Louis, 38, who submitted testimony this week against the Missouri bill. “It’s terrifying and it’s willfully ignorant.”

Utz recounted terminatin­g her pregnancy in its 21st week in November 2016, after learning her daughter would be born with a fatal kidney disease if she survived birth. She said doctors told her dilation and evacuation, the most common abortion procedure in the second trimester, was the safest way to terminate the pregnancy.

Undeterred by such stories, the National Right to Life Committee and its allies have been pushing for state laws that ban abortion after 20 weeks of pregnancy and outlaw dilation and evacuation. Supporters of both measures argue fetuses are capable of feeling pain after 20 weeks and call the procedure “dismemberm­ent abortion.”

Several court challenges to both types of laws are underway, with federal appeals courts considerin­g the “dismemberm­ent abortion” bans approved last year in Texas and Arkansas. The Kansas Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on the first-in-the-nation ban passed in that state three years ago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States