A bill proposing a near-total abortion ban causes an uproar at Georgia’s Capitol
ATLANTA (AP) — A crowd of protesters on each side of the abortion debate flooded a windowless Georgia Capitol hallway Wednesday with chants and signs as lawmakers held a hearing on a bill that would ban the procedure in almost all cases.
Although the bill will not go anywhere this year because a deadline has passed for consideration by both chambers, the hearing granted by the House’s Republican leadership gave anti-abortion activists a chance to speak out on an issue near and dear to their constituents.
Dozens milled about and shouted words of support or disdain for the proposal. Onlookers tried to squeeze into the hearing room as sheriff’s deputies guarded the area. One man raised his voice above the noise and said, “I’m so thankful that my mom gave me life” and did not “sacrifice” her children.
Each time someone left the room after testifying, they were met with cheers from those on their side of the bill.
“Tens of thousands of babies made in the image of God continue to be murdered in our state every year, all within the bounds of the current law,” said bill sponsor Rep. Emory Dunahoo, a Gillsville Republican.
The bill would make most abortions a crime from the point of fertilization, at which point one would be considered a person, and classify the procedure as a homicide. It would expand Georgia’s broad “personhood” law, which gives rights such as tax breaks and child support to unborn children. At least five states have personhood laws.
Georgia already bans abortions after finding a “detectable human heartbeat,” which can happen as early as six weeks into pregnancy, when many women still don’t know they are pregnant. Still, a flurry of religious leaders said the measure doesn’t go far enough.
Some religious anti-abortion individuals were among the bill’s opponents, though, saying it goes too far with criminalization.
Critics say the measure would bar women from lifesaving care during birth complications and in vitro fertilization. Many voiced concern that women with miscarriages or dangerous health complications would not get the care they need.
Rep. Shea Roberts, an Atlanta Democrat, recounted her own experience getting an abortion to save her life.
“It was one of the most devastating times in my life, and doctors told me that the dream of my child was going to die either inside of me or within minutes outside my body, and it would be suffering,” Roberts said.
The bill would grant some exceptions, including in cases involving a “spontaneous miscarriage” and procedures undertaken to save a woman’s life “when accompanied by reasonable steps, if available, to save the life of her unborn child.”
But opponents say doctors would be too frightened to provide such care even when necessary. They pointed to the cases — reported by ProPublica — of two women who died from delayed care tied to Georgia’s abortion law after taking abortion pills.
Doctors also noted that Georgia already has some of the nation’s highest maternal mortality rates, especially for Black women. Lawmakers should focus on helping them get more care, opponents said.
Doctors also said the bill sets the stage for the criminalization of in vitro fertilization and would force fertility clinics to close. The bill comes about a month after Georgia’s House passed a bill with bipartisan support to protect the right to in vitro fertilization. That measure was sponsored by Statesboro Republican Rep. Lehman Franklin, whose wife used IVF to conceive.
Dr. Karenne Fru, who runs a fertility clinic that provides in vitro fertilization, said the bill would put her out of work.
“My whole life is doing God’s work. He said go forth and procreate,” Fru said, her voice shaking. “I’m doing that. Please just let me continue to do that. I cannot go to jail because I want to help people become parents.”
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Kramon is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Kramon on X: @charlottekramon.
By CHARLOTTE KRAMON
Associated Press/Report for America