Los Angeles Times

Another attack on abortion

A federal bill to ban the procedure after 15 weeks illustrate­s the stakes of the Nov. 8 election.

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When the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade in June, striking down a constituti­onally guaranteed right to abortion and directing decisions on abortion to be made by the states, Republican lawmakers hailed that approach. But no one — neither abortion rights supporters nor abortion opponents — expected GOP members of Congress to stop the assault on reproducti­ve rights, no matter what they said.

And now they have gone further. As if the chaos of a post-Roe nation of restrictio­ns varying from state to state weren’t grim enough, now we have the makings of a nightmare: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on Tuesday introduced a nationwide 15week abortion ban known as the Protecting Pain-Capable Unborn Children from LateTerm Abortions Act. This is a very restrictiv­e abortion ban that is based on the premise that fetuses can feel pain at 15 weeks — a belief soundly rejected by the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts.

Graham has done voters a favor, in a sense, by starkly illuminati­ng the stakes in the upcoming midterm elections. This bill will get a vote in Congress if Republican­s win back control of the House and Senate, he vowed.

Not only does this give lie to the Republican talking point praising the court for turning abortion laws over to the states, it defies what most voters support. In a Pew poll conducted before the June 24 decision in Dobbs vs. Women’s Health Organizati­on that overturned Roe, most U.S. adults said abortion should be legal in all or most cases.

A later Pew poll showed that most Americans (57%) disagreed with the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs and that 62% believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases. Think about that: If a similar percentage of senators agreed with Americans, that would be enough votes to break the Senate filibuster and pass the Women’s Health Protection Act, codifying a nationwide right to abortion.

Graham’s bill is not a compromise between what abortion opponents want and what a majority of Americans said they support. How does he square his proposal for a national 15-week ban after saying in May that it was fair to return the decisionma­king to the states? Not very well. Graham said that because Democrats had introduced a bill codifying a national right to abortion (which the Senate rejected), he was going to introduce a counterpro­posal showing where Republican­s stand. That’s ridiculous. Democratic lawmakers never embraced the Dobbs decision.

Most abortions are performed during the first trimester — which ends after 12 weeks of gestation. This bill would disallow abortions just three weeks into the second trimester and long before viability (starting at roughly at 23 to 24 weeks), which was the cut-off for abortions under Roe except under special circumstan­ces. And as more states ban abortion even earlier in a pregnancy, it will force people to travel farther to get an abortion in another state. In some cases, what would have been a first-trimester abortion when Roe was in place now becomes a second-trimester abortion due solely to circumstan­ces.

The bill allows for exceptions for rape and for incest against minors (provided they’ve met the requiremen­ts for counseling and legal reporting) and in cases when the pregnant person’s life is endangered.

But we’ve seen how little those exceptions truly protect pregnant individual­s in states with severe restrictio­ns. There are already harrowing stories of people with ectopic pregnancie­s, severe fetal abnormalit­ies and infections being forced to continue pregnancie­s that endanger their lives because doctors and hospital administra­tors are too scared to decide when a medical or a health emergency overrides a law.

This bill doesn’t supersede the even more restrictiv­e or total abortion bans in effect in more than a dozen states so far. But it would override the more permissive laws that allow abortions roughly up to viability, or beyond, in states such as California, Washington, Oregon, New York and Illinois. And that’s what Graham and abortion opponents want — a country that essentiall­y refuses pregnant people the right to control their own bodies and lives.

No one who cares about a person’s right to bodily autonomy should take for granted the danger this bill presents. It’s imperative that on Nov. 8, voters in every state remember this as they choose their next representa­tives in Congress.

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