House Passes Bill to Protect Babies Born Alive After Failed Abortions

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Democrats blocked the same bill in the Senate. The bill comes as thousands of pro-lifers are expected to flood the capital for the 52nd National March for Life.

A bill to establish standards of care for babies born alive after failed abortions passed along party lines in the House on Jan. 23.

The 217โ€“204 vote followed a heated debate in the chamber, during which Republicans stressed that the bill was not about abortion but the babies who survive the procedure.

โ€œAs a physician, it is beyond my comprehension that anyone would not intervene to save an innocent and defenseless human life,โ€ Rep. Gregory Murphy (R-N.C.) said, defending the bill on the House floor.

โ€œNeglect is harm. Neglect is immoral. Abortion is not the issue.โ€

The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act requires medical professionals present at a newborn abortion survivorโ€™s birth to provide the same level of life-saving care to that baby as would be offered to any other premature infant of the same gestational age.

The bill mandates the transfer of such infants to a hospital for additional treatment and also establishes reporting requirements for violations. Penalties for violating the law could include fines and up to five years in prison, though the childโ€™s mother would be protected from prosecution.

Democrats, however, argued that infanticide is already illegal and that the bill is therefore unnecessary.

โ€œThis bill does not solve a problem,โ€ Rep. Kelly Morrison (D-Minn.), an obstetrician, said before voting against the measure in the House.

โ€œDoctors are already both honored and obligated to provide appropriate care for their patients. It is illegal to kill a newborn infant in all 50 states.โ€

From 2019 to 2021 in Morrisonโ€™s home state of Minnesota, there were at least eight reported cases in which newborn abortion survivors died post-birth, according to the Minnesota Department of Health. In five of those cases, no measures were reported to have been taken to save the babiesโ€™ lives. In the other three cases, โ€œcomfort careโ€ was provided.

Other Democrats argued that the bill would allow for government interference in womenโ€™s reproductive health decisions and deprive parents of the opportunity to comfort their dying babies.

โ€œOnly 1 percent of all abortions happen at 21 weeks or later, and if they do, it is because of a serious fetal abnormality or the health of the mother,โ€ Rep. Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) said. โ€œAnd if you are the one getting that news, it is heartbreaking, it is earth-shattering. And the last thing families need is government to interfere with their access to care.โ€

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