Lake County Record-Bee

States aim to chip away at abortion rights with Supreme Court in mind

- By Justin Franz

When Rep. Lola Sheldon-Galloway introduced a bill in the Montana House two years ago that would have prohibited abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, the Republican legislator knew it was unlikely to survive the veto pen of the Democratic governor.

Sure enough, then-Gov. Steve Bullock vetoed that bill and two other antiaborti­on measures passed by the Republican-led state legislatur­e. In his veto message, Bullock wrote that “for over 40 years, the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that the U.S. Constituti­on prohibits a state from banning abortion.”

But now Bullock’s gone, replaced by Republican Greg Gianforte, who has promised to sign two proposed measures that would put new limits on abortion. And abortion-rights advocates worry the court ruling that Bullock based his vetoes on — the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision — is on shaky ground.

The Supreme Court tilted further right with last year’s confirmati­on of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, giving the high court a makeup of six justices appointed by Republican presidents and three appointed by Democrats.

According to Kristin Ford, national communicat­ions director for NARAL Pro-Choice America, more than 60 bills have been introduced or passed in state legislatur­es so far this year to restrict abortion. Most are in conservati­ve-leaning states like Montana, Kansas and Wyoming.

“These legislator­s are willing to do whatever it takes to advance their extreme agenda of gutting Roe v. Wade and pushing abortion care as far out of reach as possible,” Ford said. “With Roe in the crosshairs, the stakes for women, people who are pregnant and families are higher than ever.”

Ford and other abortionri­ghts advocates said any one of those bills could be challenged and make its way to the Supreme Court.

That’s the apparent aim of the conservati­ve state lawmakers pushing bills. In Montana, legislator­s have introduced six anti-abortion measures so far this year, including Sheldon-Galloway’s proposed ban on abortions after 20 weeks.

“If this legislatio­n made it all the way to the Supreme Court, that would be a good thing, because we need to revisit Roe v. Wade,” Sheldon-Galloway said.

Eric Scheidler, executive director of the Pro-Life Action League, based in Chicago, said the rash of bills exemplifie­s the changing methods of the anti-abortion movement. When his father founded the Pro-Life Action League in the 1970s, the organizati­on’s goal was simply to get the Roe v. Wade decision overturned, either in the courts or in the statehouse­s. But now antiaborti­on groups are taking a piecemeal approach.

He said it’s more likely that the current Supreme Court will overturn Roe v. Wade incrementa­lly rather than all at once.

“Will this court overturn Roe v. Wade? It’s possible,” Scheidler said. “But I think we’re more likely to see this court put more restrictio­ns on abortion. I think five years from now we’ll realize that Roe v. Wade was slowly overturned without it ever making a big headline.”

For anti-abortion groups, pushing legislatio­n through at the state level may be their only option since Democrats control Congress and the White House. President Joe Biden has said he wants to “codify” Roe v. Wade and appoint federal judges who will respect the precedent.

Sheldon-Galloway said her bill, dubbed the PainCapabl­e Unborn Child Protection Act, would protect unborn children who might feel pain during an abortion.

Abortion advocates said that the bill is based on dubious science and that abortions at that point in pregnancy are rare and usually happen only for medical reasons. Similar bills are being introduced in Florida, Hawaii, New Jersey and Oregon.

“There are very few abortions that happen after 20 weeks, and when they do they usually occur because of a significan­t medical issue,” said Alison James, chairperso­n of Montanans for Choice, an abortion-rights group. “These are usually wanted pregnancie­s, and so these unnecessar­y laws put women and families through the wringer. It will treat them like criminals.”

“There are very few abortions that happen after 20 weeks, and when they do they usually occur because of a significan­t medical issue. These are usually wanted pregnancie­s, and so these unnecessar­y laws put women and families through the wringer. It will treat them like criminals.”

— Alison James, chairperso­n of Montanans for Choice

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