House Republicans set to approve antiabortion bills after daunting midterm

House Republicans will address abortion for the first time in their new majority Wednesday, proposing two pieces of legislation that their razor-thin majority is expected to pass.

The votes come after the reversal of Roe v Wade by the Supreme Court last summer, which factored heavily into voter behavior in the November midterms, particularly in states where abortion issues were on the ballot. Voters in several states rejected antiabortion measures, while other states voted to codify abortion protections into law.

The House will vote on a resolution, which carries no legislative weight, that condemns attacks on “pro-life facilities, groups and churches.” Republicans on the House floor Wednesday described attacks and vandalism at these facilities since the Roe v Wade opinion leaked last summer.

“This resolution is straightforward,” Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) said. “This is a resolution that says we appreciate the good work that happens at crisis pregnancy centers where they take in women, where they help them and help that unborn child so that unborn child gets to experience the gift of life.”

Democrats countered that abortion providers have been under attack for decades, noting specifically the murder of physician George Tiller in Kansas in 2009.

The House will also vote on the “Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act,” aimed at compelling doctors to provide care to infants that survive an attempted abortion, a situation that is rare. Some experts say there were already protections for infants included in a 2002 law and even before that established infants have the rights of a full person. The legislation adds new penalties, including fines or imprisonment of up to five years for health care providers who do not comply.

The proposals under consideration Wednesday are more measured than the legislation Republican leaders had seriously considered introducing had they won a larger majority in the midterms. Besides the legislation on survivors of attempted abortion, sponsored by Rep. Ann Wagner (R-Mo.), leaders had considered introducing Rep. Christopher H. Smith’s (R-N.J.) bill that would “ban the use of federal funds for abortions or for health coverage that includes abortions”— often referred to as the Hyde Amendment — and prohibit abortions from being performed at federal health-care facilities or by a federal employee.

Leaders had also considered voting on Smith’s abortion ban legislation, known as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, early in the legislative session. The bill, which Smith has repeatedly introduced, had been rewritten to ban abortions beginning at 15 weeks, down from 20, following the rollback of Roe v Wade. But the legislation was met with fierce criticism after Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) introduced the Senate counterpart ahead of the midterms, which angered Republicans who feared that discussing abortion ahead of November could negatively influence voters who had yet to decide which party to cast their ballot for. The bill has not been put on a House schedule yet and was pulled from consideration in 2015 under a Republican majority because several lawmakers believed the exception provision went too far.

The House GOP is starting with the “very basic minimum,” said Kristan Hawkins, the president of Students for Life of America, adding she believes Democrats should also sign onto this legislation.

“Would I have liked to see a more aggressive prevention act introduced and voted on? Absolutely,” she said.

Abortion-rights groups labeled the legislation as “deliberately misleading and offensive.” The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says the measures take decisions out of doctors hands, forcing clinicians “to administer interventions even when there is no chance of survival.”

“Let’s be clear: Doctors are already required to provide appropriate medical care by law,” Jacqueline Ayers, a senior vice president at the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement.

The two votes Wednesday are expected to get overwhelming support by Republicans, who earlier in the week voted against the Democrats’ Roe codification bill Monday evening.

To counter the bill on infant survivors of attempted abortion, Democrats will force a vote on a motion by Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.) that would prohibit government restrictions on abortion care. It is expected to fail.

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), a rape survivor, has become the most outspoken Republican woman in the conference as the party debates abortion-related measures. Unlike most Republicans, Mace routinely talked about the need for Congress to pass federal exceptions to abortion bans that would protect women who were sexual assault victims. In a state where the right to an abortion is now under threat, she won by roughly 15 points in November.

“Some of those measures, like my state, want to ban exceptions. Over my dead body. It’s not going to happen,” Mace said in an interview last month. “We’ve got to revisit what we’re going to do post Roe. What can we as Congress do to find some common ground and find that balance?”

Since Roe was overturned, House GOP women signaled that winning back the majority would give them the opportunity to influence reproductive health policies even though most strayed away from the exceptions question. Most said that wanting to introduce legislation that was “pro-family,” like addressing maternal health access in rural areas, where women often drive significant distance to get care, and redirecting state funds toward online portals that connect families in need to organizations that can provide child-care-related services, such as churches, foster care and donation centers.

It’s common for Republicans when they’re in the majority to vote on antiabortion bills around the time of March for Life, an annual abortion protest in late January on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade. The effort is aimed at showing unity before the Jan. 20 rally, the first in a post-Roe America, where over a dozen states now restrict the procedure.

“Our government’s most sacred duty is to safeguard the lives of all Americans,” Marjorie Dannenfelser, the president of SBA Pro-Life America, said in a statement. “We thank GOP leadership for recognizing the federal government’s crucial role in protecting our most vulnerable children and their mothers in the Dobbs era.”

Yet, the policies are a far cry from the full list of legislation many antiabortion and conservative leaders want newly empowered House Republicans to pursue. In a recent letter to Congress, over three dozen groups urged a federal ban on abortion after fetal cardiac activity is detected, which typically occurs around six weeks of pregnancy, among other demands.

After Roe was overturned, the House Democratic majority held a series of votes meant to put Republicans in an uncomfortable spot and get them on record opposing abortion and reproductive health measures ahead of the midterms, such as protecting access to contraception. Now, Republicans are attempting to turn the tables.

“I think there’s been a sense in national politics that the Republicans’ position on abortion is too extreme,” Mary Ziegler, a professor of law at the University of California at Davis. “I think this is the Republican Party trying to say ‘Oh, no, actually, we’re not the ones who are extreme, look at the vote on this bill.’”

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