The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Heartbeat abortion bill veto survives day of overrides

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS >> Statehouse Republican­s in Ohio came up a single vote shy Thursday of reversing a sameparty governor’s veto and imposing one of the most restrictiv­e abortion laws in the country.

The outcome marked a victory for outgoing Republican Gov. John Kasich, a prospectiv­e 2020 presidenti­al contender who has vetoed the so-called heartbeat bill twice in as many years. Kasich argued in a veto message last week that the law would be declared unconstitu­tional, but only after saddling the state with a costly court battle.

Republican Senate President Larry Obhof dismissed the cheers that broke out in his chamber after senators voted 19-13 to override the so-called heartbeat bill veto, when 20 votes were needed. The bill would have prohibited the procedure at the first detectable heartbeat, as early as six weeks into pregnancy.

“I think that the celebratio­n for some of the people in here will be short-lived,” Obhof told reporters. “We will have a supermajor­ity that is pro-life in both chambers in the next General Assembly — we’re getting sworn in in less than two weeks, and we have a governor coming in who has said he would sign that bill.”

Still, abortion rights activists bedecked in red and pink regalia claimed the vote as a victory. The bill’s author, Janet Porter, declined a request for comment.

The failing Senate vote followed a successful override count in the Ohio House. The chamber mustered exactly the 60 votes necessary, but only after swiftly swearing in the 80-year-old father of a former state representa­tive to take his seat and cast the deciding vote.

“What you see continuous­ly with this bill — with the last-minute pushes, the never full sets of hearings, always last-minute hijinks — really proves that they know they don’t have the will of the people with this bill,” said Jaime Miracle of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio. “It is just too extreme. Without exceptions for rape and incest, a 6-week abortion ban is blatantly unconstitu­tional.”

That was what Kasich effectivel­y said in his second veto message on the bill in as many years.

During the rare postChrist­mas showdown, Ohio lawmakers did successful­ly override Kasich’s vetoes of two other bills, one expanding gun-owner rights and another he opposed because it increased the pay of elected officials, including some incoming state officehold­ers.

“The governor doesn’t always agree with the General Assembly’s decisions — and on these issues he profoundly disagrees — but he, of course, respects its role in the process,” spokesman Jon Keeling said in a statement.

The Ohio House declared early in the day that it didn’t intend to revisit Kasich’s 18-month-old veto protecting the Medicaid expansion allowed under the federal Affordable Care Act.

In one of the day’s extraordin­ary moments, it was a Democrat, state Sen. Mike Skindell, of Lakewood, who read the entirety of Kasich’s veto message on the gun bill on the Senate floor, as he argued for colleagues to let the veto stand. It was mostly Democrats who supported the veto Thursday, while Republican­s provided the votes to override it.

The legislatio­n shifts the burden of proof in self-defense cases from defendants to prosecutor­s, allows offduty police officers to carry weapons and phases in preemption of many local firearms restrictio­ns.

“Even though John Kasich used all his political power and even used political gamesmansh­ip, he could not stop the Legislatur­e from doing their job, and executing the will of the Ohio people,” the Buckeye Firearms Associatio­n said on its website.

Obhof said the bill has wrongly been roped into the national debate over gun violence, when most of its provisions bring Ohio law in line with a majority of other states. Sen. Bill Coley, a Cincinnati Republican, called the bill “very narrow.”

But State Sen. Peggy Lehner, of Kettering, was among Republican­s who voted to let Kasich’s veto of the measure stand.

“We have a gun problem in this country and we need to recognize that,” she said.

 ?? JULIE CARR SMYTH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican state Rep. Christina Hagan, sponsor of the Ohio heartbeat bill, holds her baby at the back of the Ohio Senate chamber on Thursday, Dec. 27, in Columbus, as she awaits potential Senate action overriding a governor’s veto. The bills author, Janet Porter, stands to her right.
JULIE CARR SMYTH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican state Rep. Christina Hagan, sponsor of the Ohio heartbeat bill, holds her baby at the back of the Ohio Senate chamber on Thursday, Dec. 27, in Columbus, as she awaits potential Senate action overriding a governor’s veto. The bills author, Janet Porter, stands to her right.

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