Iowa passes 'fetal heartbeat' abortion
ban, most restrictive in U.S.
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[May 03, 2018]
By Barbara Goldberg
(Reuters) - Iowa's Republican-controlled
legislature passed the most restrictive abortion ban in the United
States on Wednesday, outlawing the procedure after a fetal heartbeat is
detected, often at six weeks and before a woman realizes she is
pregnant.
The Senate voted 29-17 to pass the House of Representatives-approved
bill, according to the legislature's online voting tallies. The bill now
goes to Republican Governor Kim Reynolds, an abortion opponent, who has
not said publicly whether she will sign it into law.
The legislation is aimed at triggering a challenge to Roe v. Wade, the
U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 landmark decision which established that women
have a constitutional right to an abortion, activists on both sides of
the issue said.
Abortion opponents aim to land abortion questions back in front of the
nation's top court, where they believe the 5-4 conservative majority
could sharply curtail abortion access or ban it outright.
"We created an opportunity to take a run at Roe v. Wade - 100 percent,"
said Republican state Senator Rick Bertrand of Sioux City, who said the
legislation is designed to be "thrust into the court" that has become
more conservative following President Donald Trump's appointment of
Justice Neil Gorsuch.
Spokeswoman Becca Lee of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, which
supports access to abortion, called it an "intentionally
unconstitutional ban on 99 percent of safe, legal abortion, designed to
challenge Roe v. Wade."
"The bill weaponizes fetal heartbeat, which is by all accounts an
arbitrary standard that bans abortion long before the point of fetal
viability," Lee said in an email to Reuters.
Mississippi's Republican governor in March signed into law a bill
banning abortion after 15 weeks with some exceptions, sparking an
immediate court challenge by abortion rights advocates.
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Opponents of a California law, requiring anti-abortion pregnancy
centers to post signs notifying women of the availability of
state-funded contraception and abortion, hold a rally in front of
the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, U.S., March 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Andrew Chung
A similar court challenge is underway in Kentucky, which in April
enacted a ban on a common abortion procedure from the 11th week of
pregnancy.
The newest Iowa bill, which the state Senate passed early Wednesday
after overnight wrangling by lawmakers, requires any woman seeking
an abortion to undergo an abdominal ultrasound to screen for a fetal
heartbeat. If one is detected, healthcare providers are barred from
performing an abortion.
Among the few exceptions are if the woman was raped or a victim of
incest and has reported that to authorities.
The bill would ban most abortions in the state and was passed in the
final days of the Iowa legislative session.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg in New York; editing by Scott Malone
and Jonathan Oatis)
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