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Governor Asa Hutchinson said he was signing the bill because of its ‘overwhelming legislative support and my sincere and long-held pro-life convictions’.
Governor Asa Hutchinson said he was signing the bill because of its ‘overwhelming legislative support and my sincere and long-held pro-life convictions’. Photograph: Staton Breidenthal/AP
Governor Asa Hutchinson said he was signing the bill because of its ‘overwhelming legislative support and my sincere and long-held pro-life convictions’. Photograph: Staton Breidenthal/AP

Arkansas bans nearly all abortions in sweeping measure

This article is more than 3 years old

Law, which supporters hope will force the supreme court to revisit Roe v Wade, does not provide exceptions for cases of rape or incest

Arkansas has passed a new law banning nearly all abortions in the state, a sweeping measure that supporters hope will force the US supreme court to revisit Roe v Wade but opponents vow to block before it takes effect later this year.

The state’s Republican governor, Asa Hutchinson, said he was signing the bill because of its “overwhelming legislative support and my sincere and long-held pro-life convictions”.

Hutchinson has signed several major abortion restrictions into law since taking office in 2015, but he had voiced concerns about the bill, which only allows the procedure to save the life of the mother and does not provide exceptions for those impregnated in an act of rape or incest. He repeated those concerns as he announced his decision.

“(The ban) is in contradiction of binding precedents of the US supreme court, but it is the intent of the legislation to set the stage for the supreme court overturning current case law,“ he said in a statement released by his office. “I would have preferred the legislation to include the exceptions for rape and incest, which has been my consistent view, and such exceptions would increase the chances for a review by the US supreme court.”

Arkansas is one of at least 14 states where legislators have proposed outright abortion bans this year.

The bans were pushed by Republicans who want to force the supreme court to revisit its 1973 Roe v Wade decision legalizing abortion nationwide. Conservatives believe the court is more open to striking down the decision following Donald Trump’s three appointments to the court.

Arkansas’s legislation won’t take effect until 90 days after the majority-Republican legislature adjourns this year’s session. That means it can’t be enforced until this summer at the earliest. Abortion rights supporters said they plan to challenge the ban in court before then.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas called the ban “cruel and unconstitutional”.

“Governor Hutchinson: we’ll see you in court,“ Holly Dickson, the ACLU of Arkansas executive director, said.

“This is politics at its very worst,“ Alexis McGill Johnson, the president of Planned Parenthood Action Fund, said in a statement. “At a time when people need economic relief and basic safety precautions, dismantling abortion access is cruel, dangerous and blatantly unjust.”

Arkansas has some of the strictest abortion measures in the US and two years ago Hutchinson signed into law a measure that would ban the procedure if the Roe decision was overturned. Another measure Hutchinson signed in 2019 banning abortions after 18 weeks of pregnancy is on hold due to a legal challenge.

Several other restrictions are still being considered in the legislature, including one approved by the senate a day earlier that would require a woman having an abortion to first be shown an ultrasound.

Another sweeping abortion ban was signed into law by South Carolina’s governor last month but was quickly blocked by a federal judge due to a legal challenge by Planned Parenthood. Alabama enacted a near-total ban on abortions in 2019 that has been blocked because of court challenges.

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