Lodi News-Sentinel

Abortion rights bill falls short in Senate

- Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats on Wednesday failed to advance a bill to establish a federal right to abortion, but they still hoped the effort would draw a sharp political contrast with Republican­s who largely support the Supreme Court’s expected ruling to undo the Roe v. Wade decision.

Democrats knew their effort would fail. The vote was 49-51, with Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., joining all Republican­s in opposition. The procedural measure needed 60 votes to overcome the filibuster threshold.

But Democrats said they wanted to send a political message to voters, particular­ly in states with Senate races this November that could determine party control of the chamber, such as Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia, Nevada and Wisconsin.

“When November comes, Americans everywhere need to make their voices heard by sending more pro-choice voices to the Senate and to the House so we can get this done,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.

Democrats said the Women’s Health Protection Act would codify the 1973 Roe decision that establishe­d a constituti­onal right to abortion.

The bill would also prohibit many of the state-level abortion restrictio­ns that exist today, such as laws that mandate abortion clinics meet certain surgical facility standards, a requiremen­t that shuttered some clinics in states with the laws.

The vote came as both parties prepare for the expected Supreme Court ruling, which, if it tracks largely to a leaked draft published by Politico last week, would allow states to set their own abortion policy.

Democrats are hoping to corral abortion rights supporters’ anger to the ballot box this fall. Republican­s are trying to avoid appearing as though they’re spiking the football before a decision is final, but some are already preparing for the next fight: attempting to pass a national abortion ban.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, RKy., on Tuesday refused to rule out a vote on a national abortion ban if Republican­s are in the majority in the future. He said the Senate is likely to continue to hold votes on abortion legislatio­n, as it has done occasional­ly in the past and on Wednesday. But he pointed out that no abortion policy bill in recent memory has achieved 60 votes.

He added that “the widespread sentiment in my conference is this issue will be dealt with at the state level.”

Democrats have pledged to fight to keep abortion available nationwide and called Wednesday’s doomed vote the first step in that process. They have not said what else they might try.

In February, the Senate held a vote on a nearly identical abortion bill, and it fell 46-48.

“This is the first time this is no longer just an abstract exercise. Now we know women’s rights are at stake,” Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, D-N.Y., said before the vote. “We’re going to keep fighting and we will be pursuing the best path forward.”

The party is facing the difficult reality that even though it narrowly controls the Senate, it doesn’t have 50 Democrats who support abortion rights, due to Manchin’s opposition. Without a 60-vote majority or 50 Democrats willing to overturn or carve out the filibuster for abortion rights, they have no legislativ­e arrows in their quiver.

Still, there are small signs of movement within the party. Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvan­ia, a Democrat who has long opposed abortion rights, supported Wednesday’s procedural vote on the bill and said he would vote for final passage, if given the chance.

Casey voted as recently as 2018 in support of advancing a bill that would ban abortion at 20 weeks of pregnancy, along with other votes in support of anti-abortion policy. His political career built on the legacy of his father, the antiaborti­on legislator named in the 1992 Planned Parenthood vs. Casey case in which the court reaffirmed abortion rights through fetal viability, or about 24 weeks of pregnancy.

Casey attributed his reversal to the leaked Supreme Court decision and the Republican­s who are pushing a national six-week abortion ban. “The real question of the moment is: Do you support a categorica­l ban on abortion?” Casey said in a statement. “During my time in public office, I have never voted for — nor do I support — such a ban.”

Republican Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, two lawmakers who typically buck their party to support abortion rights, opposed the Democrats’ bill.

They argued it goes further than merely codifying Roe. They take particular opposition to the bill’s eliminatio­n of existing protection­s for health care workers who oppose abortion and wish to refuse to participat­e in the procedure. Democrats dispute their interpreta­tion of the bill.

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