The Union Democrat

Collins says she would oppose bill on abortion rights

- By JENNIFER HABERKORN

WASHINGTON — As Democrats consider legislatio­n to respond to a new Texas state ban on abortion after about six weeks of pregnancy, they have lost the support of one of the few remaining

Republican­s who support abortion rights.

Sen. Susan Collins, RMaine, said Tuesday she opposes the Democrats’ bill, which would prohibit states from enacting restrictio­ns on abortion through fetal viability.

The House is expected to approve the bill Friday. In the Senate, Democratic leaders are considerin­g whether to bring it to a vote.

Democrats, led by bill author Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t, say their legislatio­n would “codify” the Supreme Court’s Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion.

But in a brief interview, Collins said the bill goes further than that by interferin­g with existing law that ensures health profession­als who object to abortion are not required to participat­e in it.

“I support codifying Roe. Unfortunat­ely the bill … goes way beyond that. It would severely weaken the conscious exceptions that are in the current law,” Collins said, adding that she found parts of the bill’s language “extreme.”

Collins said the bill would weaken the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act, which protects a person’s ability to exercise their religion. She cited the past support for the act by Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., and President Joe Biden, when he was in the Senate.

“This ‘ carve out’ would be unpreceden­ted, and I do not believe it is necessary to codify Roe,” she said in a follow-up statement.

Collins said she is talking with other senators on a potential bill that “truly would codify Roe.”

The key provision of the Democrats’ bill is a ban on states prohibitin­g or interferin­g with abortion through viability. It also attempts to respond to several state laws that abortion rights supporters say limit access to the procedure, such as prohibitin­g states from requiring physicians to conduct extraneous tests or hold credential­s at a nearby hospital before providing an abortion.

The Maine Republican’s opposition to the Democrats’ bill is likely to only further fuel liberals’ distrust of Collins, who is one of only two remaining Republican­s in Congress who support abortion rights, along with Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski.

There is lingering hostility from liberals over Collins’ vote to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh. He voted in favor of the Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Texas law to take effect and is viewed as a likely vote to undermine Roe.

Collins defended her support for Kavanaugh. “People ought to read what the decision actually said. It said there’s serious constituti­onal and procedural issues which clearly the court is going to take up,” Collins said. “I think we need to wait and see what happens.”

The Democrats’ bill, if brought to the Senate floor, faces certain defeat. It would need 60 votes to overcome a GOP filibuster.

Democrats have 48 cosponsors in the Senate for the bill. Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, a member of the Democratic leadership, said she is “counting every vote.”

Though it remains unclear whether the legislatio­n would even achieve a simple majority of 50, some abortion rights supporters, including Blumenthal, are pushing for a vote to force senators to go on the record on abortion rights.

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