New York Daily News

Moderate GOP pols told their bill won’t work

- BY MICHAEL MCAULIFF AND DAVE GOLDINER

A coalition of pro-choice groups urged moderate Republican­s on Monday to abandon their alternativ­e to a Democratic push to legalize abortion after a draft Supreme Court opinion that will likely soon overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision leaked to the press.

The 17 abortion-rights groups told Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) in a letter that the senators’ bill — framed as an option that could gain some GOP support — would not effectivel­y protect women’s right to choose.

“[The bill] would not protect the right to abortion. It fails to expressly prohibit previabili­ty abortion bans,” the letter reads. “The bill’s vague wording could give courts additional arguments to uphold abortion restrictio­ns and previabili­ty bans.”

The coalition, including liberal heavyweigh­ts like Planned Parenthood, NARAL, the Center for American Progress and the ACLU, want to toss cold water on the idea that Democrats should back the bill backed by Collins and Murkowski to put a bipartisan gloss on their push to protect abortion rights.

They pointed out that the Collins-Murkowski bill fails to emphatical­ly back the red lines that courts interpreti­ng Roe have drawn that state abortion is a constituti­onal right if the procedure happens before a fetus can live outside the womb.

“It offers no assurance that previabili­ty bans on abortion ... would be invalid,” the letter said. “Likewise, the bill would not stop bans modeled after Texas’ vigilante-enforced ban on abortion.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) plans to force a vote on his own Senate pro-choice bill as soon as Wednesday.

Neither bill has any chance of winning the 60 votes needed to overcome a Republican filibuster.

A similar measure only won 46 votes last year, with some moderate Democrats opposed.

Given that math, Schumer and other Democratic leaders are unlikely to compromise with a couple of moderate GOP lawmakers who have virtually no sway in their party.

Instead, the majority leader plans to push the Democratic bill in a gambit to get all Republican­s to vote against it — a clear-cut partisan split that could offer Democrats a significan­t and much needed boost in the upcoming midterm elections.

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