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		On abortion, Trump agenda likely leads to 
		Supreme Court, not Congress 
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		 [February 07, 2019] 
		By Lawrence Hurley 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald 
		Trump urged lawmakers in his State of the Union address to put new 
		limits on abortion, but partisan division in the U.S. Congress means the 
		Supreme Court likely will set the agenda on the divisive issue, as it 
		has for decades.
 
 Bolstered by Trump's appointment of two conservative justices, the 
		nine-member court could soon begin to pare back abortion rights, 
		starting with a major case from Louisiana that is one of several similar 
		pending appeals.
 
 The addition of Trump appointees Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch could 
		alter the conservative-majority court's approach to abortion. Kavanaugh 
		replaced Justice Anthony Kennedy, a conservative who backed abortion 
		rights in key rulings in 1992 and 2016.
 
 Jennifer Popik, director of federal legislation for the anti-abortion 
		National Right to Life Committee, said her group hopes Kavanaugh and 
		Gorsuch will "interpret the Constitution more narrowly" on abortion 
		rights.
 
 In Congress, legislation backed by Trump's fellow Republicans already 
		has been introduced to restrict late-term abortions along the lines 
		discussed by Trump, but there are not enough votes to pass it given 
		Democratic opposition.
 
		
		 
		
 Abortion is one of the most contentious issues in U.S. politics. Trump, 
		whose abortion views have been fluid over the years, has emerged as an 
		advocate of more restrictions, a position that appeals to his 
		conservative voter base.
 
 His address on Tuesday night in some ways kicked off his 2020 
		re-election campaign. His call for new limits on late-term abortions was 
		welcomed by anti-abortion activists.
 
 When he ran for president in 2016, Trump said he would appoint 
		anti-abortion judges who would vote to overturn the landmark 1973 
		Supreme Court ruling Roe v. Wade that recognized a woman's 
		constitutional right to abortion and legalized the procedure nationwide.
 
 In his State of the Union address, Trump criticized a New York law and 
		legislation in Virginia that would in limited circumstances allow for 
		late-term abortions when the mother's health is endangered.
 
 "To defend the dignity of every person, I am asking the Congress to pass 
		legislation to prohibit the late-term abortion of children who can feel 
		pain in the mother's womb," Trump said during the speech, without 
		specifying details.
 
 A White House spokeswoman said Trump backs legislation pending in 
		Congress that would ban abortions after 20 weeks.
 
 'SMOKE AND MIRRORS'
 
 Jennifer Dalven, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, which 
		backs abortion rights, called Trump's comments "smoke and mirrors."
 
 "This is really just a distraction. The goal is not to end a certain 
		class of abortion. His goal is to end all abortions," Dalven added.
 
		There is no nationwide law setting a specific limit on when in a 
		pregnancy abortions can be performed. Each state has its own laws, with 
		conservative states imposing restrictions and liberal states more 
		broadly backing abortion rights.
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			A counter-protester holds an anti-Trump sign behind an anti-abortion 
			demonstrator as the annual March for Life concludes at the U.S. 
			Supreme Court in Washington, DC, U.S. January 27, 2017. 
			REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan/File Photo 
            
 
            Republicans have embraced the federal legislation to ban abortion 
			after 20 weeks. But past bills have failed to overcome Democratic 
			opposition, even when Republicans controlled both the House of 
			Representatives and the Senate.
 With the House now led by Democrats and the Senate by Republicans, 
			there is even less chance of such legislation passing, though 
			Republicans said on Wednesday they would press for a vote.
 
 As of the end of last year, 17 states had laws banning abortions 20 
			weeks after fertilization, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a 
			nonprofit research organization that supports abortion rights. No 
			states categorically ban all late-term abortions in all 
			circumstances and 43 states have laws that impose at least some 
			restrictions, it said.
 
 The Roe v. Wade ruling, reaffirmed by the high court in 1992, 
			concluded that abortion could not be banned before the fetus is 
			viable, but gave states leeway to impose greater restrictions on it 
			toward the end of a pregnancy.
 
 In 2007, the court upheld a federal restriction on "partial-birth 
			abortions" that involve a physician removing most of the fetus 
			intact rather than dismembering it.
 
 In its most recent major abortion ruling, the Supreme Court - with 
			Kennedy joining the court's four liberals in the majority - in 2016 
			struck down regulations in Texas that abortion rights advocates said 
			would shutter many clinics.
 
 The Louisiana case pending before the justices resembles the Texas 
			case. It involves a requirement that doctors who perform abortions 
			have a difficult-to-obtain arrangement called "admitting privileges" 
			at a hospital within 30 miles (48 km) of the clinic.
 
 The provision was challenged by abortion rights advocates. If the 
			court rejects their request, it would represent a shift away from 
			the 2016 ruling following Kennedy's retirement.
 
 The court will also decide soon whether to hear Indiana's bid to 
			revive a state ban on abortions performed due to the sex or race of 
			the fetus or evidence of disability. Indiana this week asked the 
			Supreme Court to hear another abortion case concerning a law to 
			require fetal ultrasounds before abortions take place.
 
            
			 
			(Additional reporting by Alexandra Alper and Susan Cornwell; Editing 
			by Kevin Drawbaugh and Will Dunham)
 
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