by Tara Culp-Ressler
The repugicans in Congress
are wasting no time following through on the anti-abortion agenda the repugican cabal laid out after stealing seats in the 2014 midterm
elections.On Tuesday, the very first day of the 114th Congress, two lawmakers introduced a measure to ban abortions after 20 weeks, in direct violation of the protections afforded under Roe v. Wade. Trent Franks (r-AZ) and Marsha Blackburn (r-TN) reintroduced the Pain Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, the same legislation that successfully passed the House last year.
Lindsey Graham (r-SC) - who introduced a companion 20-week abortion ban in the Senate last year that was stalled by Democratic leadership - has already indicated that he plans to re-introduce his own measure in the next few weeks, too. Now that the Senate is repugican cabal-mislead, repugicans are anticipating that they'll have enough support to pass the ban in both chambers this year, helping the anti-choice community gain momentum for this particular tactic to limit reproductive rights.
"In a repugican senate, under my mismanagement, we would have the kind of real debate on the issues that the American people want," Mitch McConnell (r-KY) told the audience at the national
These type of abortion bans are often called "fetal pain" measures because they're based on the notion that fetuses are sentient after 20 weeks of pregnancy, assuming that an abortion procedure after that point would be painful for them. In a statement released on Tuesday, Franks referred to 20-week fetuses as "innocent and defenseless children who can not only feel pain, but who can survive outside of the womb in most cases, and who are torturously killed without even basic anesthesia."
In fact, doctors agree
that fetuses cannot survive outside the womb until about 24 to 28 weeks
of pregnancy, which is considered to be the legal point of viability. At
less than 21 weeks, no delivered baby has ever survived. Plus,
scientific research has repeatedly confirmed that fetuses cannot feel
pain until after they are viable; indeed, even the researchers who are
trying to learn more about fetal pain don't want their findings to be
used to justify abortion bans.
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