Illinois may expand abortion rights as other states restrict
The
Outnumbered
The vote shows how red and blue states are diverging on the issue, with blue states such as
At least six states have adopted steep restrictions or bans on abortion — neighboring
"These attacks have increased dramatically. They're focused and strategic and aimed at undermining our right to bodily autonomy and self-determination," Cassidy said.
Democratic Gov.
Cassidy, whose first pregnancy two decades ago ended with a medically necessary abortion which she said saved her life and her ability to have her three sons, repeatedly said the intent is to "codify current practice."
That proved dissatisfactory to Rep.
But Bourne noted that the bill makes exceptions for a physician's determination that viability could be sustained only with an "extraordinary" post-birth procedure or because of factors "relevant to the patient's health and well-being," including "familial health," a definition for which Bourne sought futilely. The bill does not appear to include a definition. questioned definitions of terms such as "familial health" of a mother as a reason for which a doctor might agree to an abortion as late as 40 weeks into the pregnancy.
"This bill means that for a woman at my stage in pregnancy, where the baby responds to his dad's voice as he reads him books at night, ... the baby is perfectly healthy, but if that woman says, 'Based on my familial health, this is medically necessary,' that is allowed," Bourne said. "We are talking about the most expansive bill we have ever seen in this state and one of the most expansive across the country."
Cassidy pointed out that the legislation's discussion of the mother's health after fetal viability comes from Doe v. Bolton, a
"All of the factors are there, based on
But with President
There are plenty of testing grounds.
"If you think this bill goes too far, who do you want to send to prison?" asked Rep.
"No words can express the disappointment and heartache pro-life Illinoisans, like myself, are feeling," Rivera said.
The bill is SB25.
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