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NRL News
Page 9
June 2010
Volume 37
Issue 6
Action Taken on Two More
Oklahoma Pro-Life Bills
By Liz Townsend
As the current session of
the Oklahoma legislature drew to a close May 28, members of the
House and Senate ran out of time to override Gov. Brad Henry’s veto
of a bill that would have prevented abortions from being covered by
a state-run insurance exchange. However, earlier sin the week they
successfully overrode another veto on a bill to require more
detailed abortion reporting, according to The Oklahoman.
“We
regret being unable to override yet another pro-abortion veto by
Governor Henry,” said Tony Lauinger, state chairman of Oklahomans
For Life and NRLC Vice President, “but we applaud the Oklahoma House
and Senate for their magnificent accomplishments this year in
defending unborn children, expectant mothers, and pro-life
health-care professionals.”
These two bills made a total
of eight pro-life measures passed by the legislature in this
session. Henry vetoed four of them, but the legislators overrode
three. One of the bills that was enacted over Henry’s veto, which
requires an abortion provider to perform and describe an ultrasound,
is being challenged in court.
The legislators were able to
reverse Henry’s veto of House Bill 3284 May 25. According to the
bill, abortionists will be required to report any complications and
specific details about each abortion, including the baby’s
gestational age, abortion method used, the number of previous
pregnancies and abortions, and method of payment. The abortionist
will also have to ask the woman for her reasons for having the
abortion, although she can decline to answer.
“Complications,
in particular, are seldom reported, and the public is left in the
dark about the damage that abortion inflicts on women,” Lauinger
said. “The bill also gathers information about the reasons women
seek abortions; hopefully, this information will make it possible to
address underlying problems in ways that could avoid the taking of
an innocent human life.”
Henry vetoed the last bill,
HB 3290, just before midnight on May 26, less than 48 hours before
the legislature adjourned for the year, the Associated Press (AP)
reported. Since the House and Senate were still feverishly working
on major budget bills that had to be passed, there was no time to
devote to a veto override.
HB 3290 would have prevented
a state-run health-insurance exchange, which will be created as part
of ObamaCare, from offering elective abortion coverage. There would
still have been an option for people to purchase such coverage with
separate premiums, but no tax funds would be involved. The bill
would have made Oklahoma the third state after Arizona and Tennessee
to remove abortion from government-run insurance exchanges,
according to the AP.
“We
look forward to working with our legislators to enact the bill
restricting insurance coverage for elective abortions next year,”
Lauinger said. |