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But the rush to regulate has exposed division among groups and lawmakers who consider themselves staunch abortion opponents.
On April 11, Ohio became the latest state to ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected. For a long time, Ohio Right to Life supported a more gradual approach to restrict the procedure and deemed what’s come to be called a “heartbeat bill” too radical – until this year. Restricting abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected basically bans the procedure after 6 weeks’ gestation – before many women know they’re pregnant.
“We see the court as being much more favorable to prolife legislation than it has been in a generation,” spokeswoman Jamieson Gordon said. “So we figured this would be a good time to pursue the heartbeat bill as the next step in our incremental approach to end abortion on demand.”
The Ohio law contains no exception for pregnancies that are the result of rape or incest; it does have an exception for the life of the mother.
Some say the rush to pass these bills is about lawmakers competing to get their particular state’s law before the Supreme Court. The state that helps overturn Roe v. Wade would go down in history.
More than 250 bills restricting abortions have been filed in 41 states this year, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research and advocacy group.
“After the appointment of Justice [Brett] Kavanaugh, there really is just an environment in state legislatures to roll back abortion rights. And so we’re seeing these bans just fly through,” said Elizabeth Nash, who monitors state laws at Guttmacher.
But the speed of passage of some of these laws masks divisions about strategy and commitment to the cause within the antiabortion movement.
Tennessee infighting over ‘heartbeat bill’
In Tennessee, for instance, there’s a philosophical split between pragmatists and idealists.
A “heartbeat bill” in the state has had high-profile support, including from Tennessee’s new governor. But the Republican attorney general warned such a law would be difficult to defend in court. And several Republicans, swayed by that logic, voted no for the legislation.
“This is an issue that is extremely important to me. It’s the reason I got into politics many years ago,” Republican state Rep. Bill Dunn said as the House approved the measure over his objection earlier this year. Dunn has said he wants to stop abortion, but that will require strategy. He pointed out that no heartbeat bill has ever been enforced. And recent laws in Iowa and Kentucky have been immediately blocked in court. The same is expected for Ohio.
“No. 1, it’ll probably never save a life if we go by what’s happened in the past,” Rep. Dunn argued on the Tennessee House floor.
But it was money that ultimately stopped the heartbeat bill this year in Tennessee. (It stalled in committee, though the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee agreed to review the bill this summer.)
Senate Speaker Randy McNally, who also opposes abortion, said he has no interest in wasting tax dollars to make a point.
Even worse, in the view of Republicans who voted against the heartbeat bill, the state could end up paying the legal fees for groups that defend abortion.
“That is a big concern,” Sen. McNally said. “We don’t want to put money in their pockets.
The last time Tennessee had a case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court, it cost roughly $1.9 million. The experience was enough to give a few antiabortion crusaders some pause. They voted last week with Democrats for a 1-year delay on a heartbeat bill, vowing to study the issue over the summer.
Name-calling in Oklahoma
Even if it doesn’t result in a case that upends abortion law, heavily Republican legislatures like Oklahoma’s want to be ready.
“If Roe v. Wade ever gets overturned, we won’t be prepared,” Republican Senate Pro Tempore Greg Treat said while explaining his so-called trigger bill at a committee hearing in February.
Treat’s legislation, modeled after existing laws in a handful of states, would “trigger” a state ban on abortion and make it a felony if Roe were overturned. A handful of states, including Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota and South Dakota, already have trigger laws on the books.
Oklahoma has some of the strictest abortion laws in the nation, such as mandatory counseling and a 72-hour waiting period. But the most conservative antiabortion activists in the state want more immediate action. So they targeted Sen. Treat and other self-described “prolife” Republicans with protests, billboards and flyers, accusing them of not being antiabortion enough.
“I’ve been called every name in the book these past few weeks,” Sen. Treat said. “I’ve had my Christianity questioned. I’ve had a member of my own caucus hold a press conference and call me a hypocrite.”
In response, Sen. Treat abandoned the trigger bill.
Now he’s trying something else – an amendment to the state constitution that would reinforce that nothing in Oklahoma law “secures or protects” the right to abortion. But that’s still not antiabortion enough for some.
“It’s going to add on to that legacy that we have of death and just status quo prolife policy that does nothing,” said Republican state Sen. Joseph Silk.
Not far enough in Georgia
In Georgia, a “heartbeat bill” passed the legislature, but has paused at Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. Supporters of abortion rights don’t want him to sign it, of course, but some antiabortion activists aren’t happy either.
“It really just does not go far enough in the protection of innocent human life,” said Georgia Right to Life executive director Zemmie Fleck, who argued that certain exceptions in his state’s bill – for abortions after rape or incest if the woman makes a police report – weaken it.
Gov. Kemp has until May 12 to sign or veto the measure.
Cost-as-no-objection Kentucky
The American Civil Liberties Union in Kentucky sued the day after a “heartbeat bill” was signed into law by Republican Gov. Matt Bevin. But even during his annual speech to the Kentucky legislature in February, Gov. Bevin acknowledged his intent to challenge Roe v. Wade.
“Some of these will go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. But at the end of the day, we will prevail because we stand on the side of right and we stand on the side of life,” he said.
Kentucky has become accustomed to defending abortion restrictions in court. Currently, one law that makes it a felony for a doctor to perform a common abortion in the second trimester has been suspended indefinitely.
It is unclear how much it costs Kentucky to defend abortion laws that are immediately challenged. In an emailed statement, Gov. Bevin administration spokesman Woody Maglinger wrote that the state is using in-house lawyers, and hasn’t hired outside counsel. He declined to provide a cost estimate on hours spent on these cases.
“It is impossible to place a price tag on human lives,” Mr. Maglinger wrote.
This story is part of a partnership that includes Nashville Public Radio, NPR, and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
But the rush to regulate has exposed division among groups and lawmakers who consider themselves staunch abortion opponents.
On April 11, Ohio became the latest state to ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected. For a long time, Ohio Right to Life supported a more gradual approach to restrict the procedure and deemed what’s come to be called a “heartbeat bill” too radical – until this year. Restricting abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected basically bans the procedure after 6 weeks’ gestation – before many women know they’re pregnant.
“We see the court as being much more favorable to prolife legislation than it has been in a generation,” spokeswoman Jamieson Gordon said. “So we figured this would be a good time to pursue the heartbeat bill as the next step in our incremental approach to end abortion on demand.”
The Ohio law contains no exception for pregnancies that are the result of rape or incest; it does have an exception for the life of the mother.
Some say the rush to pass these bills is about lawmakers competing to get their particular state’s law before the Supreme Court. The state that helps overturn Roe v. Wade would go down in history.
More than 250 bills restricting abortions have been filed in 41 states this year, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research and advocacy group.
“After the appointment of Justice [Brett] Kavanaugh, there really is just an environment in state legislatures to roll back abortion rights. And so we’re seeing these bans just fly through,” said Elizabeth Nash, who monitors state laws at Guttmacher.
But the speed of passage of some of these laws masks divisions about strategy and commitment to the cause within the antiabortion movement.
Tennessee infighting over ‘heartbeat bill’
In Tennessee, for instance, there’s a philosophical split between pragmatists and idealists.
A “heartbeat bill” in the state has had high-profile support, including from Tennessee’s new governor. But the Republican attorney general warned such a law would be difficult to defend in court. And several Republicans, swayed by that logic, voted no for the legislation.
“This is an issue that is extremely important to me. It’s the reason I got into politics many years ago,” Republican state Rep. Bill Dunn said as the House approved the measure over his objection earlier this year. Dunn has said he wants to stop abortion, but that will require strategy. He pointed out that no heartbeat bill has ever been enforced. And recent laws in Iowa and Kentucky have been immediately blocked in court. The same is expected for Ohio.
“No. 1, it’ll probably never save a life if we go by what’s happened in the past,” Rep. Dunn argued on the Tennessee House floor.
But it was money that ultimately stopped the heartbeat bill this year in Tennessee. (It stalled in committee, though the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee agreed to review the bill this summer.)
Senate Speaker Randy McNally, who also opposes abortion, said he has no interest in wasting tax dollars to make a point.
Even worse, in the view of Republicans who voted against the heartbeat bill, the state could end up paying the legal fees for groups that defend abortion.
“That is a big concern,” Sen. McNally said. “We don’t want to put money in their pockets.
The last time Tennessee had a case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court, it cost roughly $1.9 million. The experience was enough to give a few antiabortion crusaders some pause. They voted last week with Democrats for a 1-year delay on a heartbeat bill, vowing to study the issue over the summer.
Name-calling in Oklahoma
Even if it doesn’t result in a case that upends abortion law, heavily Republican legislatures like Oklahoma’s want to be ready.
“If Roe v. Wade ever gets overturned, we won’t be prepared,” Republican Senate Pro Tempore Greg Treat said while explaining his so-called trigger bill at a committee hearing in February.
Treat’s legislation, modeled after existing laws in a handful of states, would “trigger” a state ban on abortion and make it a felony if Roe were overturned. A handful of states, including Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota and South Dakota, already have trigger laws on the books.
Oklahoma has some of the strictest abortion laws in the nation, such as mandatory counseling and a 72-hour waiting period. But the most conservative antiabortion activists in the state want more immediate action. So they targeted Sen. Treat and other self-described “prolife” Republicans with protests, billboards and flyers, accusing them of not being antiabortion enough.
“I’ve been called every name in the book these past few weeks,” Sen. Treat said. “I’ve had my Christianity questioned. I’ve had a member of my own caucus hold a press conference and call me a hypocrite.”
In response, Sen. Treat abandoned the trigger bill.
Now he’s trying something else – an amendment to the state constitution that would reinforce that nothing in Oklahoma law “secures or protects” the right to abortion. But that’s still not antiabortion enough for some.
“It’s going to add on to that legacy that we have of death and just status quo prolife policy that does nothing,” said Republican state Sen. Joseph Silk.
Not far enough in Georgia
In Georgia, a “heartbeat bill” passed the legislature, but has paused at Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. Supporters of abortion rights don’t want him to sign it, of course, but some antiabortion activists aren’t happy either.
“It really just does not go far enough in the protection of innocent human life,” said Georgia Right to Life executive director Zemmie Fleck, who argued that certain exceptions in his state’s bill – for abortions after rape or incest if the woman makes a police report – weaken it.
Gov. Kemp has until May 12 to sign or veto the measure.
Cost-as-no-objection Kentucky
The American Civil Liberties Union in Kentucky sued the day after a “heartbeat bill” was signed into law by Republican Gov. Matt Bevin. But even during his annual speech to the Kentucky legislature in February, Gov. Bevin acknowledged his intent to challenge Roe v. Wade.
“Some of these will go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. But at the end of the day, we will prevail because we stand on the side of right and we stand on the side of life,” he said.
Kentucky has become accustomed to defending abortion restrictions in court. Currently, one law that makes it a felony for a doctor to perform a common abortion in the second trimester has been suspended indefinitely.
It is unclear how much it costs Kentucky to defend abortion laws that are immediately challenged. In an emailed statement, Gov. Bevin administration spokesman Woody Maglinger wrote that the state is using in-house lawyers, and hasn’t hired outside counsel. He declined to provide a cost estimate on hours spent on these cases.
“It is impossible to place a price tag on human lives,” Mr. Maglinger wrote.
This story is part of a partnership that includes Nashville Public Radio, NPR, and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.
But the rush to regulate has exposed division among groups and lawmakers who consider themselves staunch abortion opponents.
On April 11, Ohio became the latest state to ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected. For a long time, Ohio Right to Life supported a more gradual approach to restrict the procedure and deemed what’s come to be called a “heartbeat bill” too radical – until this year. Restricting abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected basically bans the procedure after 6 weeks’ gestation – before many women know they’re pregnant.
“We see the court as being much more favorable to prolife legislation than it has been in a generation,” spokeswoman Jamieson Gordon said. “So we figured this would be a good time to pursue the heartbeat bill as the next step in our incremental approach to end abortion on demand.”
The Ohio law contains no exception for pregnancies that are the result of rape or incest; it does have an exception for the life of the mother.
Some say the rush to pass these bills is about lawmakers competing to get their particular state’s law before the Supreme Court. The state that helps overturn Roe v. Wade would go down in history.
More than 250 bills restricting abortions have been filed in 41 states this year, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research and advocacy group.
“After the appointment of Justice [Brett] Kavanaugh, there really is just an environment in state legislatures to roll back abortion rights. And so we’re seeing these bans just fly through,” said Elizabeth Nash, who monitors state laws at Guttmacher.
But the speed of passage of some of these laws masks divisions about strategy and commitment to the cause within the antiabortion movement.
Tennessee infighting over ‘heartbeat bill’
In Tennessee, for instance, there’s a philosophical split between pragmatists and idealists.
A “heartbeat bill” in the state has had high-profile support, including from Tennessee’s new governor. But the Republican attorney general warned such a law would be difficult to defend in court. And several Republicans, swayed by that logic, voted no for the legislation.
“This is an issue that is extremely important to me. It’s the reason I got into politics many years ago,” Republican state Rep. Bill Dunn said as the House approved the measure over his objection earlier this year. Dunn has said he wants to stop abortion, but that will require strategy. He pointed out that no heartbeat bill has ever been enforced. And recent laws in Iowa and Kentucky have been immediately blocked in court. The same is expected for Ohio.
“No. 1, it’ll probably never save a life if we go by what’s happened in the past,” Rep. Dunn argued on the Tennessee House floor.
But it was money that ultimately stopped the heartbeat bill this year in Tennessee. (It stalled in committee, though the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee agreed to review the bill this summer.)
Senate Speaker Randy McNally, who also opposes abortion, said he has no interest in wasting tax dollars to make a point.
Even worse, in the view of Republicans who voted against the heartbeat bill, the state could end up paying the legal fees for groups that defend abortion.
“That is a big concern,” Sen. McNally said. “We don’t want to put money in their pockets.
The last time Tennessee had a case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court, it cost roughly $1.9 million. The experience was enough to give a few antiabortion crusaders some pause. They voted last week with Democrats for a 1-year delay on a heartbeat bill, vowing to study the issue over the summer.
Name-calling in Oklahoma
Even if it doesn’t result in a case that upends abortion law, heavily Republican legislatures like Oklahoma’s want to be ready.
“If Roe v. Wade ever gets overturned, we won’t be prepared,” Republican Senate Pro Tempore Greg Treat said while explaining his so-called trigger bill at a committee hearing in February.
Treat’s legislation, modeled after existing laws in a handful of states, would “trigger” a state ban on abortion and make it a felony if Roe were overturned. A handful of states, including Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota and South Dakota, already have trigger laws on the books.
Oklahoma has some of the strictest abortion laws in the nation, such as mandatory counseling and a 72-hour waiting period. But the most conservative antiabortion activists in the state want more immediate action. So they targeted Sen. Treat and other self-described “prolife” Republicans with protests, billboards and flyers, accusing them of not being antiabortion enough.
“I’ve been called every name in the book these past few weeks,” Sen. Treat said. “I’ve had my Christianity questioned. I’ve had a member of my own caucus hold a press conference and call me a hypocrite.”
In response, Sen. Treat abandoned the trigger bill.
Now he’s trying something else – an amendment to the state constitution that would reinforce that nothing in Oklahoma law “secures or protects” the right to abortion. But that’s still not antiabortion enough for some.
“It’s going to add on to that legacy that we have of death and just status quo prolife policy that does nothing,” said Republican state Sen. Joseph Silk.
Not far enough in Georgia
In Georgia, a “heartbeat bill” passed the legislature, but has paused at Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk. Supporters of abortion rights don’t want him to sign it, of course, but some antiabortion activists aren’t happy either.
“It really just does not go far enough in the protection of innocent human life,” said Georgia Right to Life executive director Zemmie Fleck, who argued that certain exceptions in his state’s bill – for abortions after rape or incest if the woman makes a police report – weaken it.
Gov. Kemp has until May 12 to sign or veto the measure.
Cost-as-no-objection Kentucky
The American Civil Liberties Union in Kentucky sued the day after a “heartbeat bill” was signed into law by Republican Gov. Matt Bevin. But even during his annual speech to the Kentucky legislature in February, Gov. Bevin acknowledged his intent to challenge Roe v. Wade.
“Some of these will go all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. But at the end of the day, we will prevail because we stand on the side of right and we stand on the side of life,” he said.
Kentucky has become accustomed to defending abortion restrictions in court. Currently, one law that makes it a felony for a doctor to perform a common abortion in the second trimester has been suspended indefinitely.
It is unclear how much it costs Kentucky to defend abortion laws that are immediately challenged. In an emailed statement, Gov. Bevin administration spokesman Woody Maglinger wrote that the state is using in-house lawyers, and hasn’t hired outside counsel. He declined to provide a cost estimate on hours spent on these cases.
“It is impossible to place a price tag on human lives,” Mr. Maglinger wrote.
This story is part of a partnership that includes Nashville Public Radio, NPR, and Kaiser Health News. Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.