Texas Passes Abortion Ban Protecting 'Every Unborn Child With a Heartbeat'
By Mary Margaret Olohan Published on May 19, 2021
Texas Passes Abortion Ban Protecting 'Every Unborn Child With a Heartbeat' | The Stream
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday that Texas had passed an abortion ban protecting "every unborn child with a heartbeat."
"The heartbeat bill is now LAW in the Lone Star State," Abbott tweeted Wednesday.
"This bill ensures the life of every unborn child with a heartbeat will be saved from the ravages of abortion."
Texas' Heartbeat Act bans abortions after the unborn baby has a heartbeat. By the end of the fourth week of pregnancy, according to the Cleveland Clinic, the unborn baby's tiny heart tube will beat about 65 times a minute, and the baby's heartbeat can be detected by about six weeks.
The law, which makes exceptions for medical emergencies but not in cases of rape or incest, gives private citizens both in and out of Texas the power to sue abortion clinics or individuals who help women obtain abortions, according to the Texas Tribune. This may make the law more difficult to challenge in court, the publication noted....
..."The Texas Heartbeat Act is the strongest Pro-Life bill passed by the Legislature since Roe v. Wade and will save thousands of lives," Rebecca Parma,
Texas Right to Life senior legislative associate, said in a statement provided to
The Daily Caller News Foundation last week.
"This is a historic day and now is the time to build on our momentum."
Texas' new law comes only days after news that the Supreme Court would review a case directly challenging aspects of Roe v. Wade.
Additionally, the
pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute announced in late April that
lawmakers have introduced 536 pro-life pieces of legislation since January.
"The number of abortion restrictions — and
specifically bans on abortion designed to directly challenge Roe v. Wade and the U.S. constitutional right to abortion — that
have swiftly been enacted over the past four months is
unprecedented," Guttmacher said in a press release.
"If this trend continues, 2021 will end up as the most damaging antiabortion state legislative session in a decade — and perhaps ever."