Oklahoma lawmakers pass legislation to outlaw nearly all abortions
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[April 29, 2022]
By Gabriella Borter
(Reuters) - The Oklahoma legislature on
Thursday approved two bills that would ban virtually all abortions, and
both Republican-composed laws would take effect immediately if the
governor signs them as he has promised.
Oklahoma would become the most restrictive U.S. state for abortions
under the bill passed by the state Senate to ban them except in cases of
medical emergency, rape or incest. Earlier, the state's House of
Representatives approved a separate piece of legislation to ban
abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The Senate also had previously
approved that measure.
"The goal of this bill is to protect unborn children, and therefore we
are telling everyone that abortion is prohibited except in limited
circumstances," Senator Julie Daniels, a Republican, said of the
near-total ban.
Governor Kevin Stitt, also a Republican, has said he will sign any
anti-abortion legislation that reaches his desk.
Should the near-total ban be enacted, it would be the only one of its
kind to go into effect in the United States since the 1973 Roe v. Wade
decision by the Supreme Court established abortion rights nationwide,
according to the Guttmacher Institute, an abortion rights advocacy
research group.
Republican-led states have been passing ever-stricter abortion bans,
expecting a forthcoming Supreme Court decision will alter or reverse Roe
v. Wade.
The Supreme Court is due to rule by the end of June on a case involving
a Republican-backed Mississippi abortion law. During oral arguments,
conservative justices signaled a willingness to dramatically curtail
abortion rights.
Oklahoma's four abortion clinics had been bracing for Thursday's
legislative action, which could mean they must soon cease abortion
services entirely.
Planned Parenthood and other abortion rights advocacy groups filed two
lawsuits in Oklahoma courts on Thursday, seeking to block enforcement of
the new six-week ban as well as a near-total ban passed earlier this
month that threatens prison for providers.
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A doctor does an ultrasound on a patient from Austin, Texas, before
her surgical abortion at Trust Women clinic in Oklahoma City, U.S.,
December 6, 2021. Picture taken December 6, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein/File Photo
Dr. Shelly Tien said she knew the surgical and
medication abortions she provided at the Trust Women clinic in
Oklahoma City earlier this week could be her last in the state. Tien
travels monthly from Florida to work at the clinic.
"It makes me very sad that I won't be able to go
back there and provide care for those patients," she said.
More than half her patients this week were from Texas, she said.
Oklahoma had become a destination for women from Texas looking to
end their pregnancies after their home state's six-week ban took
effect last fall.
In recent weeks, Trust Women has been scheduling more patients for
abortions at its sister clinic in Wichita, Kansas, about two hours
away driving, spokesperson Zack Gingrich-Gaylord said.
The Wichita clinic has brought on about a half dozen new abortion
doctors, is hiring support staff and also is adding more days that
abortions are provided to prepare for an uptick in patients from
Oklahoma, he said. Abortion is legal in Kansas up to 20 weeks in
pregnancy.
Gingrich-Gaylord said the Oklahoma City clinic has some medication
abortion appointments scheduled for next week, but those are
contingent on when the governor signs the ban.
The House must first approve amendments to the near-total ban before
it goes to the governor.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; editing by Colleen Jenkins and David
Gregorio)
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