{"id":159201,"date":"2022-06-25T20:23:03","date_gmt":"2022-06-25T20:23:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=159201"},"modified":"2022-06-25T20:23:03","modified_gmt":"2022-06-25T20:23:03","slug":"ban-abortion-pills-prosecute-planned-parenthood-this-is-the-future-republicans-want","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/politics\/ban-abortion-pills-prosecute-planned-parenthood-this-is-the-future-republicans-want\/","title":{"rendered":"Ban Abortion Pills, Prosecute Planned Parenthood: This Is The Future Republicans Want"},"content":{"rendered":"

The first “fetal heartbeat” law — banning abortion at what was at the time a flagrantly, almost laughably unconstitutional six weeks — was proposed 26 times before it found a state legislature willing to advance it. Signed into law in North Dakota in 2013, the ban was quickly struck down by the Supreme Court. But in the years that followed, more states began to warm to the idea of outlawing abortion much earlier than was previously imaginable. Many more.<\/p>\n

When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade<\/em> on Friday, 12 states had passed laws banning abortion at 6 weeks. Five states had passed near-total bans on abortion at any point in pregnancy. Thirteen had “trigger bans” on the books that would automatically snap into effect banning abortion if and when the Supreme Court overturned Roe<\/em>. Several states had all three. Many, if not most, of those laws were written by organizations like Americans United for Life.<\/p>\n

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