For further information:
Megan McCrum, (202) 626-8820,
federallegislation@nrlc.org
Jessica Rodgers, 202-642-1675 or 240-432-5035,
mediarelations@nrlc.org
SOLID MAJORITY OF U.S. HOUSE
OF REPRESENTATIVES VOTES TO PREVENT
ABORTION OF PAIN-CAPABLE UNBORN CHILDREN,
BUT 154 LAWMAKERS VOTE TO DEFEND CURRENT D.C. POLICY
OF LEGAL ABORTION FOR ANY REASON UNTIL BIRTH
WASHINGTON – In a landmark vote, a
solid majority of the U.S. House of Representatives
today voted to reject the current abortion policy of
the District of Columbia, which permits legal
abortion for any reason until birth, and to replace
it with a law that would generally prevent abortion
after 20 weeks fetal age.
The legislation is the
District of Columbia Pain-Capable Unborn Child
Protection Act (H.R. 3803).
The vote was 220-154 in favor of the bill – a strong majority (a
66 vote margin), although short of the two-thirds
vote required under the fast-track procedure
utilized today (“suspension of the rules”).
“Today’s groundbreaking
majority vote constitutes a giant step towards this
bill ultimately becoming law -- perhaps after the
replacement of some of the lawmakers who today were
unwilling to protect pain-capable unborn children in
the sixth month of pregnancy and later,” said
Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
national federation of state right-to-life
organizations. “154 House members will have to
explain to their constituents why they voted to
endorse a policy of legal abortion for any reason,
until the moment of birth, in their nation’s
capital.”
H.R. 3803 contains findings that
by 20 weeks after fertilization (if not earlier),
the unborn child has the capacity to experience
great pain. (This is equivalent to 22 weeks in the
alternate “LMP” or “weeks of pregnancy” dating
system used by ob-gyns and abortion providers.) The
bill prohibits abortion after that point, except
when an acute physical condition endangers the life
of the mother. Nine states have already enacted
abortion limitations based on the pain suffered by
unborn children; no court orders have blocked
enforcement of any of those laws.
The District Clause of the U.S.
Constitution (found in Article I, Section 8)
provides that “Congress shall . . . exercise
exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over
such District . . .” Like any other “legislation,”
of course, laws pertaining to the federal district
are subject to the president’s review. Asked about
H.R. 3803 today, White House Press Secretary Jay
Carney responded, “The president’s position on a
woman’s reproductive freedom is well known,” and
went on to refer to the legislation as
“controversial, divisive social legislation.”
On July 30, a federal judge in
Arizona
upheld as constitutional a new state law that
generally prohibits abortion after 18 weeks fetal
age (20 weeks of pregnancy) – two weeks earlier than
H.R. 3803. U.S. District Judge James A. Teilborg, a
Clinton appointee, found that “by 20 weeks, sensory
receptors develop all over the child’s body” and
“when provoked by painful stimuli, such as a needle,
the child reacts, as measured by increases in the
child’s stress hormones, heart rate, and blood
pressure.” Judge Teilborg also noted, “Given the
nature of
D&Es and induction abortions . . . this Court
concludes that the State has shown a legitimate
interest in limiting abortions past 20 weeks
gestational age.”
Also today, Senator Mike Lee
(R-Utah), the prime sponsor of the Senate companion
bill (S. 2103, which has 30 cosponsors), filed the
bill as an amendment to an unrelated bill that is
currently pending on the Senate floor, S. 3414.
The NRLC website provides links to
abundant documentation on the scientific studies
that support the bill’s findings that unborn
children, by 20 weeks fetal age if not before, have
the capacity to experience great pain,
here. The abortion method most often used at
this stage, the “D&E,” is depicted in a medical
illustration,
here. Recent polling and other information on
the legislation is also posted at
http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/Fetal_Pain/index.html
Founded in 1968, the
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
federation of 50 state right-to-life affiliates and
more than 3,000 local chapters, is the nation's
oldest and largest grassroots pro-life organization.
To go to the
Pain of the Unborn Index, click here.
To return to the NRLC homepage, click
here