Republican lawmakers with control of the Iowa statehouse fast-tracked a bill early Wednesday that would ban most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy, sending what could be the nation's most restrictive abortion legislation to the governor.
Critics say the so-called "heartbeat" bill would ban the medical procedure before some women even know they're pregnant, and it sets the state up for a legal challenge over its constitutionality.
"How dare we think that the privacy and decisions of a woman and her medical choices are up to us to determine?" said Representative Vicki Lensing, an Iowa City Democrat, during House floor debate that began early afternoon Tuesday (Wednesday NZT) and stretched until shortly before midnight.
"I am personally offended by this bill that seems to second-guess a woman's ability to make an unintended and difficult decision."
The measure was passed with nearly back-to-back chamber votes along party lines, culminating in approval in the Senate shortly after 2am local time. The bill now heads to Republican Governor Kim Reynolds, who is anti-abortion but hasn't said publicly if she will sign it into law.
Her press secretary, Brenna Smith, indicated in an email the governor was open to signing it.
"Governor Reynolds is 100 percent pro-life and will never stop fighting for the unborn," Smith said.
The legislation passed overnight has some exemptions, allowing abortions after a detectable heartbeat in order to save a pregnant woman's life, and in some cases of rape and incest.
Another provision prohibits some uses of fetal tissue, with exemptions for research.
Republicans at the Iowa Capitol have long sought to approve legislation that would further restrict abortion, and their flip of the state Senate chamber in the 2016 election gave them a trifecta of GOP power for the first time in nearly 20 years.
Last session, they passed a bill banning most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, which is in effect. A provision in that legislation requiring a three-day waiting period for abortions - among the longest wait periods in the country - was challenged in court.
It remains on hold amid litigation being considered by the state Supreme Court.
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