Iowa governor signs 'fetal heartbeat'
abortion ban into law
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[May 07, 2018]
(Reuters) - Iowa Governor Kim
Reynolds signed into law on Friday a bill outlawing abortion after a
fetal heartbeat is detected, which often occurs at six weeks and before
a woman even realizes she is pregnant, and Reynolds acknowledged the
likelihood of a court challenge.
The measure, which Iowa's Republican-controlled state legislature passed
on Wednesday, is the most restrictive abortion ban in the United States.
“I understand and I anticipate that this will likely be challenged in
court, and that courts may even put a hold on the law until it reaches
the Supreme Court," Reynolds, also a Republican, said at Friday's
bill-signing, surrounded by children.
"However, this is bigger than just a law," she added. "This is about
life. I'm not going to back down from who I am or what I believe in.”
Chants from protesters were audible in the room where Reynolds signed
the bill, in a ceremony that was broadcast live.
State senators who backed the measure said earlier this week that they
were aiming to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark Roe v. Wade
decision that established that women have a constitutional right to an
abortion.
Abortion opponents hoping to land the issue back in front of the
nation's top court believe the 5-4 conservative majority could sharply
curtail abortion access or ban it outright.
At a rally in Des Moines outside the Capitol on Friday before Reynolds
signed the bill, officials of Planned Parenthood, the women's healthcare
group and backer of abortion rights, said they would file a lawsuit to
block the law.
"I am here to tell Governor Reynolds, We will see you in court," Suzanna
de Baca, president of Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, told
demonstrators. "We will challenge this law with absolutely everything we
have on behalf of our patients, on behalf of your rights, because Iowa
will not go back."
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The annual March for Life concludes at the U.S. Supreme Court where
it is met by pro-choice counter-protesters in Washington January 27,
2017. REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan
Iowa is just the latest battleground in the fight over access to
abortions.
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.
A similar court challenge is under way in Kentucky, which in April
enacted a ban on a common abortion procedure from the 11th week of
pregnancy.
The Iowa law 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 Bernie Woodall; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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