Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lt. gov. calls for abortion ban

Idaho gubernator­ial candidate wants to remove legal exceptions

- By Keith Ridler

BOISE, Idaho — Idaho Republican Lt. Gov. and gubernator­ial candidate Janice Mcgeachin on Monday demanded that Republican Gov. Brad Little call a special legislativ­e session to eliminate rape and incest as legal exceptions to Idaho’s abortion law.

The Idaho law will go into effect if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the landmark Roe v. Wade case that legalized abortion nationwide.

Mcgeachin is running against Little in the Idaho Republican gubernator­ial primary and in a statement said the potential Idaho law is insufficie­nt because of numerous exceptions. Besides rape and incest, it also allows abortions to save mothers’ lives.

“It is shameful that Idaho’s abortion laws are not the most pro-life in our country,” said Mcgeachin, who is endorsed by former President Donald Trump. “No child should ever be murdered because of the circumstan­ces surroundin­g his or her conception.”

Little in 2020 signed the so-called trigger law put forward by a group called Idaho Chooses Life, which has endorsed Little.

“It’s easy for Janice to offer cheap rhetoric on the campaign trail and try to salvage her campaign by politicizi­ng the abortion issue,” said the group’s executive director, David Ripley. “But the fact of the matter is it’s hard to imagine criminaliz­ing conduct in those situations.”

He said his group advocates a culture of love and compassion so that eventually women or girls who become pregnant through rape or incest choose to have the child.

“I don’t think we can get at those compassion­s through criminal law,” he said.

A poll from The Associated PRESSNORC Center for Public Affairs Research in June found that 61 percent of Americans say abortion should be legal in most or all circumstan­ces in the first trimester of a pregnancy. However, 65 percent said abortion should usually be illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent said that about the third trimester.

Majorities of Americans — Republican­s and Democrats alike — think a pregnant woman should be able to obtain a legal abortion if her life is seriously endangered, if the pregnancy results from rape or incest or if the child would be born with a life-threatenin­g illness.

Mcgeachin is in a tough race against the first-term Little and appears to be targeting far-right Republican­s in deeply conservati­ve Idaho for the May 17 primary. Republican primaries are only open to those registered as Republican­s and draw far fewer voters than the general election. Early in-person and mail voting is happening now for the primary.

The part-time Idaho Legislatur­e adjourned for the year in March. The only way it can come back into session is if Little calls a special session.

Little’s office didn’t immediatel­y respond to a telephone message seeking comment on Mcgeachin’s demand for the special legislativ­e session.

Earlier this year during the regular session, lawmakers approved and Little signed another abortion ban modeled after a Texas law that would be enforced through lawsuits to avoid constituti­onal court challenges.

The latter law is on hold while the Idaho Supreme Court considers a lawsuit from a regional Planned Parenthood group contending it violates the Idaho Constituti­on regarding separation of powers.

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