North
Carolina governor will sign bill for 72-hour wait for abortion
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[June 04, 2015]
By Marti Maguire
RALEIGH, N.C. (Reuters) - North Carolina
Governor Pat McCrory said on Wednesday he will sign a law requiring
pregnant women to wait three days between consulting a doctor and having
an abortion, among the longest waiting periods in the nation.
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McCrory, a Republican, faced intense lobbying from pro-choice
advocates who hoped he would veto the measure, citing his campaign
promise not to sign any further restrictions on abortion.
But in a statement released late Wednesday, McCrory said that the
final version of the bill met his approval. He noted that he had
worked with legislators to ensure that initial contact made with a
health care provider could be a phone call, so the law would not
require separate office visits.
“Some very positive progress was made during the last several days
to protect women’s health,” McCrory said. “Therefore, I will sign
this bill.”
Once the measure becomes law, North Carolina will join Missouri,
South Dakota and Utah in requiring a 72-hour waiting period. Last
month, Oklahoma also adopted a 72-hour waiting period. A total of 24
states require some waiting period before an abortion can be
performed, and several are considering new or longer restrictions
this year.
North Carolina's bill triples the state's current 24-hour waiting
period. McCrory's vow to sign it came after the state House of
Representatives gave its final approval, agreeing to slightly
modified form that passed the Senate on Monday. The house initially
approved the bill in April. All three votes fell largely along party
lines.
Protesters rallied on Wednesday in Raleigh and in Charlotte, where
McCrory was once mayor, to urge a veto. At one rally, the side of a
truck bore McCrory's image alongside his campaign promise.
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Critics noted that McCrory signed into law a previous measure
tightening regulation of abortion clinics. In a statement urging
McCrory to veto the waiting period bill, Nancy Northup, president of
the Center for Reproductive Rights, said he was being given "a
second chance to make good on his promise not to interfere with
women’s access to safe, legal, essential health care.”
“No one should be forced to delay health care because politicians
have the audacity to presume to know what is best for a woman and
her family,” said Northup, whose organization advocates for abortion
rights, in a statement.
(Editing by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Michael Perry)
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