The Columbus Dispatch

Mississipp­i passes ban on abortions after 15 weeks

- By Jeff Amy and Sarah Mearhoff

JACKSON, Miss. — Mississipp­i lawmakers on Thursday passed what is likely to be the nation’s most restrictiv­e abortion law, making the procedure illegal after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

The House voted 75-34 in favor of the measure, and Gov. Phil Bryant has said he will sign it.

The owner of Mississipp­i’s only abortion clinic has pledged to sue— a move lawmakers not only knew to expect, but seemed to be encouragin­g, in hopes of eventually getting the U. S. Supreme Court to take up the issue and allow states to begin restrictin­g abortion earlier in pregnancy.

“It seems like a pretty simple bill designed to test the viability line that the Supreme Court has drawn,” said David Forte, a law professor at Cleveland State University.

There are two exceptions to House Bill 1510: if the fetus has a health problem that would prevent it from surviving outside the womb at full term, or if the pregnant woman’s life or a “major bodily function” is threatened by the pregnancy. Pregnancie­s as a result of rape and incest are not exempt.

A number of states, including Mississipp­i, have already tiptoed up to the viability line with 20-week bans, although the U.S. Senate earlier this year rejected such a ban nationwide when supporters couldn’t reach a 60-vote supermajor­ity to act.

An appeals court in 2015 struck down efforts in North Dakota to ban most abortions after six weeks, when a fetus develops a detectable heartbeat, and in Arkansas after 12 weeks. Abortion rights supporters are dubious that the outcome in Mississipp­i would be any different.

“The Supreme Court has said and resaid again and again that states cannot prohibit women from obtaining abortions prior to viability, which is what a 15-week ban would do,” said Hillary Schneller, staff attorney for the national nonprofit Center for Reproducti­ve Rights. The New York-based group, which advocates for free access to abortion, called the bill unconstitu­tional and “medically unsound.”

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