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Freedom of Choice Act (Introduced in
House)
HR 1964 IH 110th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 1964
To protect, consistent with
Roe v. Wade, a woman's freedom to choose to bear a child
or terminate a pregnancy, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
April 19, 2007
Mr. NADLER [to see current list of
House co-sponsors, click
here] introduced the following bill; which was
referred to the Committee on the Judiciary
A BILL
To protect, consistent with
Roe v. Wade, a woman's freedom to choose to bear a child
or terminate a pregnancy, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Freedom
of Choice Act'.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress finds the following:
(1) The United States was founded
on core principles, such as liberty, personal
privacy, and equality, which ensure that
individuals are free to make their most intimate
decisions without governmental interference and
discrimination.
(2) One of the most private and
difficult decisions an individual makes is
whether to begin, prevent, continue, or
terminate a pregnancy. Those reproductive health
decisions are best made by women, in
consultation with their loved ones and health
care providers.
(3) In 1965, in Griswold v.
Connecticut (381 U.S. 479), and in 1973, in Roe
v. Wade (410 U.S. 113) and Doe v. Bolton (410
U.S. 179), the Supreme Court recognized that the
right to privacy protected by the Constitution
encompasses the right of every woman to weigh
the personal, moral, and religious
considerations involved in deciding whether to
begin, prevent, continue, or terminate a
pregnancy.
(4) The Roe v. Wade decision
carefully balances the rights of women to make
important reproductive decisions with the
State's interest in potential life. Under Roe v.
Wade and Doe v. Bolton, the right to privacy
protects a woman's decision to choose to
terminate her pregnancy prior to fetal
viability, with the State permitted to ban
abortion after fetal viability except when
necessary to protect a woman's life or health.
(5) These decisions have
protected the health and lives of women in the
United States. Prior to the Roe v. Wade decision
in 1973, an estimated 1,200,000 women each year
were forced to resort to illegal abortions,
despite the risk of unsanitary conditions,
incompetent treatment, infection, hemorrhage,
disfiguration, and death. Before Roe, it is
estimated that thousands of women died annually
in the United States as a result of illegal
abortions.
(6) In countries in which
abortion remains illegal, the risk of maternal
mortality is high. According to the World Health
Organization, of the approximately 600,000
pregnancy-related deaths occurring annually
around the world, 80,000 are associated with
unsafe abortions.
(7) The Roe v. Wade decision also
expanded the opportunities for women to
participate equally in society. In 1992, in
Planned Parenthood v. Casey (505 U.S. 833), the
Supreme Court observed that, `[t]he ability of
women to participate equally in the economic and
social life of the Nation has been facilitated
by their ability to control their reproductive
lives.'.
(8) Even though the Roe v. Wade
decision has stood for more than 30 years, there
are increasing threats to reproductive health
and freedom emerging from all branches and
levels of government. In 2006, South Dakota
became the first State in more than 15 years to
enact a ban on abortion in nearly all
circumstances. Supporters of this ban have
admitted it is an attempt to directly challenge
Roe in the courts. Other States are considering
similar bans.
(9) Further threatening Roe, the
Supreme Court recently upheld the first-ever
Federal ban on abortion, which has no exception
to protect a woman's health. The majority
decision in Gonzales v. Carhart and Gonzales v.
Planned Parenthood Federation of America permits
the government to interfere with a woman's right
to choose to terminate a pregnancy and
effectively overturns a core tenet of Roe v.
Wade by abandoning more than 30 years of
protection for women's health. Dissenting in
that case, Justice Ginsburg called the
majority's opinion `alarming,' and stated that,
`[f]or the first time since Roe, the Court
blesses a prohibition with no exception
safeguarding a woman's health.' Further, she
said, the Federal ban `and the Court's defense
of it cannot be understood as anything other
than an effort to chip away at a right declared
again and again by this Court.'.
(10) Legal and practical barriers
to the full range of reproductive services
endanger women's health and lives. Incremental
restrictions on the right to choose imposed by
Congress and State legislatures have made access
to abortion care extremely difficult, if not
impossible, for many women across the country.
Currently, 87 percent of the counties in the
United States have no abortion provider.
(11) While abortion should remain
safe and legal, women should also have more
meaningful access to family planning services
that prevent unintended pregnancies, thereby
reducing the need for abortion.
(12) To guarantee the protections
of Roe v. Wade, Federal legislation is
necessary.
(13) Although Congress may not
create constitutional rights without amending
the Constitution, Congress may, where authorized
by its enumerated powers and not prohibited by
the Constitution, enact legislation to create
and secure statutory rights in areas of
legitimate national concern.
(14) Congress has the affirmative
power under section 8 of article I of the
Constitution and section 5 of the 14th amendment
to the Constitution to enact legislation to
facilitate interstate commerce and to prevent
State interference with interstate commerce,
liberty, or equal protection of the laws.
(15) Federal protection of a
woman's right to choose to prevent or terminate
a pregnancy falls within this affirmative power
of Congress, in part, because--
(A) many women cross State
lines to obtain abortions and many more
would be forced to do so absent a
constitutional right or Federal protection;
(B) reproductive health
clinics are commercial actors that regularly
purchase medicine, medical equipment, and
other necessary supplies from out-of-State
suppliers; and
(C) reproductive health
clinics employ doctors, nurses, and other
personnel who travel across State lines in
order to provide reproductive health
services to patients.
SEC. 3. DEFINITIONS.
In this Act:
(1) GOVERNMENT- The term
`government' includes a branch, department,
agency, instrumentality, or official (or other
individual acting under color of law) of the
United States, a State, or a subdivision of a
State.
(2) STATE- The term `State' means
each of the States, the District of Columbia,
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and each
territory or possession of the United States.
(3) VIABILITY- The term
`viability' means that stage of pregnancy when,
in the best medical judgment of the attending
physician based on the particular medical facts
of the case before the physician, there is a
reasonable likelihood of the sustained survival
of the fetus outside of the woman.
SEC. 4. INTERFERENCE WITH
REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH PROHIBITED.
SEC. 5. SEVERABILITY.
If any provision of this Act, or the
application of such provision to any person or
circumstance, is held to be unconstitutional, the
remainder of this Act, or the application of such
provision to persons or circumstances other than
those as to which the provision is held to be
unconstitutional, shall not be affected thereby.
SEC. 6. RETROACTIVE EFFECT.
This Act applies to every Federal,
State, and local statute, ordinance, regulation,
administrative order, decision, policy, practice, or
other action enacted, adopted, or implemented
before, on, or after the date of enactment of this
Act.
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To view or download the
PDF document of this bill, click here.
To return to the main
index on the "Freedom of Choice Act," click here.
To return to the NRLC home
page, click here.
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