Texas
Related: About this forumCoerced Abortion Bill Sent Back for Rewrite
The craftsmanship of a bill authored by state Rep. Molly White, R-Belton, intended to prevent women from being coerced into having abortions was met with skepticism on Wednesday by the chairman of the House State Affairs Committee, who suggested the freshman lawmaker get some "real legal folks" to help draft a better measure.
Whites House Bill 1648, which came before the committee, would make it a crime to coerce or force women to have abortions, and create a 72-hour waiting period for women who indicate they are being coerced or forced. But state affairs Chairman Byron Cook, R-Corsicana, left the measure pending after other lawmakers and some anti-abortion advocates raised concerns about the details of the bill.
This committee has passed out a number of landmark pieces of legislation in this area, and the one thing I think weve learned is they have to be extremely well-crafted, Cook said in a directive for White to beef up the bills language so it can withstand additional scrutiny and possible legal challenges. My suggestion is that you get some real legal folks to help engage on this, so if you can keep this moving forward you can potentially have the success others have had.
Cooks remarks came after Republican state Rep. Dan Huberty of Houston, the Texas Catholic Conference of Bishops and Texas Alliance for Life all of whom supported the premise of the bill raised concerns about the unintended consequences of the legislation.
Read more: http://www.texastribune.org/2015/04/29/chairman-says-coerced-abortion-bill-needs-rewrite/
[font color=green]Republican nut-job Molly White was slapped down by her fellow Republicans.[/font]
murielm99
(30,773 posts)I have not heard of many people being coerced into having an abortion. It seems to me it is usually the opposite: people are trying to coerce women NOT to have abortions.
This argument does not smell right.