Las Vegas Review-Journal

Arizona works on abortion ban

GOP advances measure to outlaw procedure after 15 weeks

- By Jonathan J. Cooper

PHOENIX — Arizona Republican­s are moving swiftly to outlaw abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy ahead of a highly anticipate­d U.S. Supreme Court decision that could bring seismic changes to abortion availabili­ty in the United States.

Arizona already has some of the nation’s most restrictiv­e abortion laws, including one that would automatica­lly outlaw it if the high court fully overturns Roe v. Wade, the nearly five-decade-old ruling that enshrined a nationwide right to abortion.

Republican­s on the Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to advance the 15-week ban in case the Supreme Court further limits abortion rights but stops short of fully overturnin­g Roe. The measure closely mirrors a Mississipp­i law that is under review at the Supreme Court.

Under current abortion rulings, abortion is legal until the point a fetus can survive outside the womb, which is usually around 24 weeks.

Lawmakers heard from nearly a dozen people on both sides of the long-simmering debate over abortion rights, including women who said their abortions saved their lives or futures and others who said they later regretted terminatin­g their pregnancie­s.

“We need to look at this issue in terms of how lives can be saved, and this is the next step, a very common sense way of saving lives in Arizona,” said Sen. Nancy Barto, a Phoenix Republican who sponsored the bill.

Abortion rights advocates said the measure won’t eliminate abortions, just drive them undergroun­d. Women who can afford it will travel out of state, and those who can’t will seek out unsafe options on the black market or be forced to carry their pregnancie­s to term.

“As long as there are unwanted pregnancie­s, there will be abortions,” said Marilyn Rodriguez, a lobbyist representi­ng Planned Parenthood.

Arizona is one of at least three Gop-led states considerin­g bans on the procedure after 15 weeks. Similar legislatio­n is under considerat­ion in Florida and West Virginia.

Against that backdrop, California lawmakers will consider plans this year to become a “sanctuary” for those seeking reproducti­ve care.

That could include paying for travel, lodging and procedures for people coming from other states.

The Arizona bill would make it a crime for a doctor to perform an abortion after 15 weeks but would prohibit the prosecutio­n of women for receiving one. Doctors could face felony charges and lose their license to practice medicine. There is an exception for cases when the mother is at risk of death or serious permanent injury, but not for instances of rape or incest.

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