The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ohio legislator­s OK nation’s toughest ban on abortion

Lawmakers deliver ‘heartbeat bill’ for governor to sign.

- By Nigel Duara Los Angeles Times

With little notice and stunning quickness, anti-abortion legislator­s in Ohio stand one signature away from enacting the nation’s most stringent abortion law in the hopes of sparking a nationwide reversal of the legal right of women to terminate their pregnancie­s.

With a day left in their annual session, lawmakers Wednesday delivered to Gov. John Kasich a revived “heartbeat bill,” a ban on abortions from the moment a fetus’ heartbeat can be detected, which can be as early as five or six weeks from conception. They left no exemptions for pregnancie­s resulting from rape or incest, but abortions would be permitted to save the life of a pregnant woman.

“No person shall knowingly and purposeful­ly perform or induce an abortion on a pregnant woman,” the bill reads, “with the specific intent of causing or abetting the terminatio­n of the life of the unborn human individual the pregnant woman is carrying and whose fetal heartbeat has been detected.”

The legislatio­n has already drawn promises of legal challenges from the American Civil Liberties Union, even before Kasich decides whether to cast a veto.

The Ohio Senate passed the abortion-ban amendment to an unrelated bill concerning child-abuse reporting on Tuesday afternoon, then passed the bill itself and sent it to the Ohio House, which voted 56-39 on Tuesday night to send the bill to Kasich for his signature.

Within hours, a Midwestern state that had already placed a number of restrictio­ns on abortions opened the door to a new round of legal challenges on an issue likely to be key under President-elect Donald Trump, who will be nominating at least one U.S. Supreme Court justice early in his new administra­tion.

Conservati­ve Ohio legislator­s mentioned Trump specifical­ly in explaining the timing of their action.

“New president, new Supreme Court nominees changed the dynamic, and there was a consensus in our caucus to move forward,” Ohio Senate President Keith Faber, a Republican who opposed a similar bill in 2014, told WHIO-TV on Tuesday. “I think the issue is still one that’s about tactics and strategy.”

At the time of his original vote against such restrictio­ns in 2014, Faber said he didn’t see a difference between a six-week ban and an outright abortion ban, which is unconstitu­tional under the Supreme Court’s Roe vs. Wade ruling legalizing abortion nationwide.

Previous abortion limits that centered on detecting a fetal heartbeat have failed in the courts, and Kasich in 2014 said he was unsure of such a bill’s constituti­onality when an Ohio House committee sent a fetal-heartbeat bill to the floor, where it failed.

Kasich, who unsuccessf­ully ran for the GOP presidenti­al nomination this year, has generally favored moderate restrictio­ns on abortion. “I am pro-life with the exceptions of rape, incest and the life of the mother,” he said on CNN in February.

Ohio already has a fetal viability bill, which forbids abortion of fetuses if a doctor determines they have a reasonable chance of viability.

So-called heartbeat bills were passed in Arkansas, over the veto of then-Gov. Mike Huckabee, and in North Dakota, only to lose upon legal challenges.

Trump’s position on abortion has been difficult to pinpoint. In a presidenti­al debate, he said the Roe vs. Wade decision would be overturned as he names conservati­ve justices to the high court. Trump said in the same debate that the issue of abortion should be left to individual states.

 ?? CHERISS MAY / NURPHOTO ?? Ohio Gov. John Kasich in 2014 said he was unsure of such a bill’s constituti­onality when a House committee sent a heartbeat bill to the floor, where it failed.
CHERISS MAY / NURPHOTO Ohio Gov. John Kasich in 2014 said he was unsure of such a bill’s constituti­onality when a House committee sent a heartbeat bill to the floor, where it failed.

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