Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Alabama abortion plan follows Texas’ lead

23 GOP House members sign off on proposal in run-up to Jan. 11 session start

- KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A group of Alabama lawmakers have proposed legislatio­n similar to a Texas law that would ban most abortions and allow anyone to file civil lawsuits against violators and collect damages.

Alabama is the latest GOP-led state to see lawmakers propose legislatio­n to mimic the Texas law and its novel citizen-enforcemen­t provision. Providers in Texas say abortions have become virtually inaccessib­le since the law was signed.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday left in place Texas’ ban on most abortions, but said providers could sue to challenge the ban. A Texas judge ruled Thursday the citizen enforcemen­t mechanism is unconstitu­tional but left the near-total ban on abortions in place.

The bill titled the “Alabama Heartbeat Act” was filed ahead of the 2022 legislativ­e session, which begins Jan. 11. It would prohibit medical providers from performing an abortion once cardiac activity is detected, usually around six weeks and before some women know they are even pregnant.

The measure would allow private citizens to file civil lawsuits against anyone who “aids or abets” an abortion and to collect at least $10,000 in damages for each performed abortion.

Republican Rep. Jamie Kiel, of Russellvil­le, Ala., the primary sponsor of the legislatio­n, said the bill mirrors the Texas law, noting that it has not been struck down yet.

“A recent [National Public Radio] article reported that in the 101 days since the law was enacted, 75-100 babies are now being saved every day in Texas. That’s what I want for Alabama. To protect the right to life of the 16 babies who are murdered here daily,” Kiel said.

Twenty-three Republican­s in the 105-member House of Representa­tives have signed on as sponsors of the bill.

Kaitlin Welborn, a repro ductive rights attorney with the American Civil Libertie Union of Alabama, urged law makers to reject the propos al and said it will be quickly challenged if it passes.

“Alabama legislator­s have filed a bill that bans abortion at 6 weeks of pregnancy and pits neighbor against neigh bor in an illegal bounty-hunt ing scheme. HB [House Bill 23 mirrors the anti-abortion legislatio­n that most recently passed in Texas, even though their abortion ban is deeply unpopular and blatantly un constituti­onal,” Welborn said in a statement.

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