Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Kansas Gov. vetoes ‘misleading’ abortion bill

Doctors could be sued for certain procedures

-

TOPEKA, Kan. — Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed a bill on Friday that could have penalized doctors accused of not providing enough care to infants delivered alive during certain kinds of abortion procedures.

In a statement on her website, Kelly, a Democrat, called the legislatio­n “misleading and unnecessar­y.”

The legislatio­n could have subjected doctors to lawsuits and criminal charges in certain kinds of abortions and in circumstan­ces when doctors induce labor to deliver a fetus that is expected to die within minutes or even seconds outside the womb.

“Federal law already protects newborns, and the procedure being described in this bill does not exist in Kansas in the era of modern medicine,” Kelly said Friday. “The intent of this bill is to interfere in medical decisions that should remain between doctors and their patients.”

Kansas’ Republican-controlled Legislatur­e gave final passage to the bill this month, and in both chambers, the bill passed with a veto-proof majority. Still, the bill’s fate has been uncertain in a legal and political climate that’s made Kansas an outlier on abortion policy among states with Gop-led legislatur­es.

Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson vowed in a statement that the Senate will move quickly to override Kelly’s veto.

Even if they succeed, the measure could still be challenged in court and not enforced. Lawsuits have prevented Kansas from enforcing a 2015 ban on a common second-trimester abortion procedure and a 2011 law imposing extra health and safety rules for abortion providers.

Kansas abortion opponents haven’t pushed to ban abortion outright despite the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in June 2022 that the U.S. Constituti­on allows it. The Kansas Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that access to abortion is a “fundamenta­l” right under the state constituti­on, and in August 2022, voters decisively rejected a proposed change to strip away protection­s for abortion rights.

Kansas For Life spokeswoma­n Danielle Underwood released a statement that said Kelly’s veto was “heartless” and she called on Kansas residents to urge lawmakers to override the governor’s decision.

“These babies deserve protection and the same medical care as any other newborn of the same gestationa­l age. This once again proves how out of touch Gov. Kelly is with the values of the people of Kansas,” Underwood said.

Senate Democratic Leader Dinah Sykes said there is no circumstan­ce in Kansas in which an infant can be delivered alive during an abortion.

“It simply does not happen,” Sykes said in a statement. “The reality is that this legislatio­n would harm mothers and health care teams who will be forced by statute to attempt care that will not change a tragic outcome, rather than provide families the dignity to grieve in peace.”

 ?? John Hanna The Associated Press ?? Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed a bill Friday that would have opened doctors to lawsuits or criminal charges under certain medical circumstan­ces.
John Hanna The Associated Press Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed a bill Friday that would have opened doctors to lawsuits or criminal charges under certain medical circumstan­ces.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States