Abortion rights bill fails to pass procedural vote, dies in U.S. Senate
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[March 01, 2022]
By Gabriella Borter and Moira Warburton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A bill to protect the
right to have an abortion in the United States died in the Senate on
Monday after it failed to garner enough Republican support to pass a
procedural vote.
While the Women's Health Protection Act was expected to fail, Democratic
leaders were under pressure from constituents to put it to a vote anyway
in a show of support for federal abortion rights, as the U.S. Supreme
Court could soon upend those rights.
Reproductive rights advocates see federal legislation as possibly the
best chance to codify the right to terminate pregnancy in the United
States, particularly after the U.S. Supreme Court's conservative
justices signaled they could soon cut constitutional protections.
The bill would have needed several Republicans' support to reach the
necessary 60-vote threshold to overcome a filibuster. It received 46
yeas and 48 nays. Senator Joe Manchin, a Democrat, voted against the
bill, as did Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins, moderate Republicans who
have supported limited abortion rights.
"Abortion is a fundamental right and women's decisions over women's
healthcare belong to women, not to extremist right-wing legislators,"
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told reporters ahead of Monday's
vote.
Abortion opponents characterized the bill as radical and said it would
nullify state laws that have been passed to restrict abortions.
"It's extreme. It's an egregious violation of the most fundamental of
all human rights, and that is the right to life," Republican Senator
Steve Daines of Montana said of the bill in debate on Monday.
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The U.S. Capitol during a storm, on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., February 22, 2022. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
ON THE RECORD
The Women's Health Protection Act, co-sponsored by 48 Senate
Democrats, stated that healthcare providers should be able to
provide abortions without a number of barriers - including
restrictions on abortions prior to fetal viability, which many
states currently have in place. It proposed that the U.S. attorney
general could sue any state or government official who violated its
terms.
Abortion rights advocates said the fact that the Senate was holding
the vote at all was a victory, since it forced senators to go on the
record for their constituents to judge.
Abortion is poised to be a key campaign issue for members of
Congress running for re-election in 2022.
"Every American deserves to know where their senator stands on an
issue as important as the right to choose," Schumer told reporters.
The right to have an abortion prior to fetal viability, typically
around 23 or 24 weeks, has been protected under the Constitution
since the Supreme Court's 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade.
In December, the Supreme Court signaled its willingness to undermine
Roe v. Wade and permit a Mississippi ban on abortion after 15 weeks.
The court's decision in that case is expected in late spring.
Some 26 states would move to immediately ban abortion if Roe is
overturned, according to the Guttmacher Institute, an abortion
rights advocacy research group.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter and Moira Warburton; Editing by
Aurora Ellis)
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