Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iowa passes abortion-ban law set to take effect July 1

- BARBARA RODRIGUEZ

DES MOINES, Iowa — Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a law Friday banning most abortions if a fetal heartbeat can be detected, or at about six weeks of pregnancy, marking the strictest abortion regulation in the nation.

The Republican signed the legislatio­n in her office at the state Capitol as protesters gathered outside chanting, “My body, my choice!” Reynolds acknowledg­ed that the new law would likely face litigation but said: “This is bigger than just a law, this is about life, and I’m not going to back down.” Reynolds has previously said she was “proud to be pro-life.”

The ban, set to take effect July 1, has propelled Iowa to the front of a push among conservati­ve statehouse­s jockeying to enact restrictiv­e regulation­s on the medical procedure. Mississipp­i passed a law earlier this year banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, but it’s on hold after a court challenge.

The Iowa law provides for some exemptions that allow abortions during a later pregnancy stage to save a pregnant woman’s life or in some cases of rape and incest.

Maggie DeWitte, who leads the group Iowans for Life, called Reynolds’ move “historic.”

“We couldn’t be more pleased,” DeWitte said Friday. “She is following through on her pledge to the people of Iowa that she is 100 percent pro-life.”

Critics argued that the bill would ban abortions before some women even know they’re pregnant. That likely sets the state up for a legal challenge, including from the same federal appeals court that three years ago struck down similar legislatio­n approved in Arkansas and North Dakota.

The bill signing came shortly after the Iowa affiliates of Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union warned that they would sue the governor if she signed the bill, which the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e quickly approved in after-hours votes earlier in the week.

“We will challenge this law with absolutely everything we have on behalf of our patients because Iowa will not go back,” Suzanna de Baca, president and chief executive of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, said in a statement.

Backers of the so-called heartbeat bill — which didn’t get a single Democratic vote in the Legislatur­e during final passage — expressed hope it could challenge Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that establishe­d women have a right to terminate pregnancie­s until a fetus is viable. Conservati­ves say an influx of right-leaning judicial appointmen­ts under President Donald Trump could make it a possibilit­y.

The same Republican-majority Legislatur­e in Iowa passed a 20-week abortion ban last year. It’s now in effect, though a provision requiring a three-day waiting period to get an abortion is tied up in a lawsuit filed by Planned Parenthood and the ACLU. Still, Republican lawmakers indicated they would push for more restrictio­ns this session.

Outside of Reynolds’ office earlier Friday, critics of the bill began leaving coat hangers by her staff’s desks. The protests followed the morning rally outside of the Capitol where more than 100 people showed up to oppose the legislatio­n. One of them was Georgia Jecklin, a retired teacher who drove in from Davenport.

“As a 66-year-old woman, I feel very strongly that women have a right to their own body decisions,” she said.

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