Gov. deflects on pushing new abortion restrictions
Gov.
Asked again Wednesday whether he is considering addressing abortion in an upcoming special session, the governor again deflected.
DeSantis called a special session later this month to address property insurance concerns. It comes on the heels of a special session last month on redistricting.
Responding to the abortion question Wednesday during an appearance in
"The property insurance, the reason we called a special session is because it's reached a crisis point... we felt we had to do it, just like we had to do the congressional districts. We had no choice, we had to do it," DeSantis said, implying that there isn't the same urgent need to tackle abortion legislation.
A draft
"I would just caution people, you know you can leak stuff out of a court, which is really unprecedented, but let's see when you actually have something rendered," said DeSantis. "Because how they negotiate these things, I don't think any of us really know when you get behind that, they keep it all very secretive."
DeSantis also was asked Tuesday during an appearance in the
"If you look at the protections that I signed into law a couple weeks ago, those were the strongest that
Florida Voice for the Unborn, an anti-abortion organization, wrote DeSantis Tuesday urging him to add a proposed ban on abortion to the scheduled special session.
Losing Roe's protections could animate the Democratic base and heighten the stakes for this year's mid-term races up and down the ballot in
A
"We're not the most pro-life state by any stretch," said UNF political science professor
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