Montana bill effectively bans all abortions after 24 weeks
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Topics: From the Wires, Life News, News
HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Montana lawmakers pushed forward with a measure Thursday that would effectively ban all abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy, regardless of medical risks to a woman.
Critics of the bill said it could be among the most extreme anti-abortion laws in the nation, even as other states consider their own proposals that would reduce the window for legal abortions.
Montana already outlaws late-term abortions, unless the life of the woman is at risk. The legislation would require physicians to deliver a fetus at six months or later by inducing a woman into labor or performing a cesarean section.
Once the fetus is removed, doctors would be required to attempt to use whatever means to resuscitate the baby. Doctors who violate the law could be charged with a felony.
“They either have to be a miracle worker or a felon,” said Sen. Diane Sands, a Democrat from Missoula who opposed the bill. She added, “It’s by far the most extreme measure I’ve seen ever proposed in Montana.”
The measure won preliminary passage in the state Senate 32-18, mostly along partisan lines.
The bill’s main proponent, Republican Sen. Albert Olszewski, said scientific and technological advances have increased the viability of fetuses.
“Now we have an issue of improved viability,” said Olszewski, who is also an orthopedic surgeon.