Gov. Wolf Promises to Veto 'Heartbeat Bill'
Gov. Tom Wolf on Nov. 1 promised to veto a "heartbeat bill" making its way through the General Assembly that would restrict women's reproductive rights.
November 08, 2019 at 01:00 PM
2 minute read
Gov. Tom Wolf on Nov. 1 promised to veto a "heartbeat bill" making its way through the General Assembly that would restrict women's reproductive rights.
"Today I am reaffirming my commitment to keeping Pennsylvania a place where women make their own health decisions," Wolf said. "Politicians should not be in a doctor's office. Make no mistake about it, while the General Assembly cleverly names anti-health care choice bills things like 'Heartbeat Bill,' this is an attack on women's personal freedoms, personal choice, and personal liberties."
House Bill 1977, sponsored by state Rep. Stephanie Borowicz, R-Clinton, would require all physicians, before proceeding with an abortion, to determine whether there is a fetal heartbeat.
"If the baby has a heartbeat, then the abortion cannot be performed," Borowicz wrote in a memo to colleagues.
Several other states, including Ohio, Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi and Missouri, passed heartbeat laws trying to ban or limit abortions, according to a statement from the Wolf administration; none have gone into effect due to court decisions of unconstitutionality.
The bill was referred to the state House of Representatives' Health Committee.
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