Newly energized by their success in November’s 
midterm elections, conservative 
legislators in dozens of states are mounting aggressive campaigns to limit 
abortions.
The lawmakers 
are drafting, and some have already introduced, bills that would ban most 
abortions at 20 weeks after conception, push women considering abortions to view 
a live ultrasound of the fetus, or curb insurance coverage, among other 
proposals.
In Florida and 
Kansas, legislators plan to reintroduce measures that were vetoed by previous 
governors but have the support of the new chief executives, like ultrasound 
requirements and more stringent regulation of late-term abortions.
“I call on the 
Legislature to bring to my desk legislation that protects the unborn, 
establishing a culture of life in Kansas,” Gov. Sam Brownback said last week in 
his first State of the State message.
“This is the 
best climate for passing pro-life laws in years,” said Michael Gonidakis, 
executive director of Ohio Right to Life, expressing the mood in many states. 
“We’ve got a pro-life governor and a brand new pro-life speaker. Our government 
now is pro-life from top to bottom.”
Abortion 
opponents plan marches in Washington and elsewhere this weekend and on Monday to 
mark the anniversary of the 1973 Supreme Court decision, Roe v. Wade, that 
established a woman’s right to an abortion.
Republicans in 
Congress hope to strengthen measures to prevent even indirect public financing 
of abortions, but laws in the states have the greatest impact on access to them. 
Abortion opponents have been emboldened by major changes in the political 
landscape, with conservative Republicans making large gains.
Although social 
issues were often played down in the campaigns, many of the newly elected 
governors and legislators are also solidly anti-abortion, causing advocates of 
abortion rights to brace for a year of even tougher battles than usual.
The biggest 
shift is in the state capitols, with 29 governors now considered to be solidly 
anti-abortion, compared with 21 last year. “This is worrisome because the 
governors have been the firewall, they’ve vetoed a lot of bad anti-choice 
legislation,” said Ted Miller, a spokesman for Naral Pro-Choice America.
In 15 states, 
compared with 10 last year, both the legislature and the governor are 
anti-abortion, according to a new report by Naral, and those joining this 
category include larger states like Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, as well as 
Georgia and Oklahoma. Maine and Pennsylvania are now strongly anti-abortion as 
well, if not quite as solidly.
Just which 
measures will pass is impossible to predict, particularly because many states 
are bogged down by budget crises.
Elizabeth Nash, 
who tracks state policies on abortion for the Guttmacher Institute, a research 
organization, said that while states would be preoccupied with budget issues, it 
appeared rather likely that more measures would pass this year than in 2010, 
which anti-abortion advocates considered a banner year, with more than 30 
restrictive laws adopted in at least nine states.
The elections 
brought even more gains for their side than expected, said Mary Spaulding Balch, 
state policy director of the National Right to Life Committee, leading her group 
to call in its affiliates for a special strategy session on Dec. 7.
While many 
anti-abortion measures have been adopted or debated over the years, including 
requiring parental consent for minors and waiting periods, advocates have set a 
few top priorities for the months ahead:
¶Banning 
abortions earlier in pregnancy. Most states place restrictions on later 
abortions, often defined as after fetal viability, or around 22 to 26 weeks 
after conception. But last year, Nebraska set what many advocates consider a new 
gold standard, banning abortions, unless there is imminent danger to the woman’s 
life or physical health, at 20 weeks after conception, on a disputed theory that 
the fetus can feel pain at that point. The measure has not been tested in court, 
but similar measures pushing back the permissible timing are being developed in 
Indiana, Iowa, New Hampshire, Oklahoma and other states.
The 20-week 
law in Nebraska, which took effect in October, forced a prominent doctor who 
performed late-term abortions to leave the state. Jill June, president of 
Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, said women suffering from complicated 
pregnancies but are not yet sick enough to qualify for an emergency abortion 
would be forced to travel to other states. Or, she said, doctors fearing 
prosecution will wait until such women become dangerously ill before considering 
an abortion.
¶Pressing 
women to view ultrasounds. While several states encourage women seeking 
abortions to view an ultrasound, Oklahoma last year adopted a requirement that 
doctors or technicians perform the procedure with the screen visible to the 
woman, and explain in detail what she is seeing. The measure is under court 
challenge, but the Kentucky Senate has passed a similar bill, and variants are 
expected to come up in states including Indiana, Maryland, Montana, Ohio, Texas, 
Virginia and Wyoming.
In Florida, 
former Gov. Charlie Crist vetoed an ultrasound bill. The new governor, Rick 
Scott, attacked him for that veto and is expected to support a new proposal.
¶Banning any 
abortion coverage by insurance companies in the new health insurance exchanges. 
Numerous states are poised to impose the ban on plans that will be offered to 
small businesses and individual insurance buyers under the Obama administration 
health plan.
The shifts to 
conservative governors, in particular, have opened new opportunities for 
abortion opponents. In Kansas, legislators said they would act quickly to adopt 
measures that were previously vetoed, including regulations that will make it 
harder to open abortion clinics or to perform abortions in the second 
trimester.
“There’s 
pent-up demand in the Legislature for these changes,” said State Representative 
Lance Kinzer
The politics 
of abortion have changed profoundly in some larger states including Michigan, 
Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
“We’re facing 
the biggest threat to reproductive rights we’ve ever faced in this state,” said 
Lisa Subeck, executive director for Naral Pro-Choice Wisconsin.
In Michigan, 
because of the switch to an anti-abortion governor, “the dominoes are lined up 
well for us this time,” said Ed Rivet, legislative director for Right to Life of 
Michigan. For starters, advocates hope to pass a state ban on the procedure 
opponents call partial-birth abortion that had been vetoed twice. After that, he 
said, “We have quite a list.”
Many defenders 
of abortion rights argue that because the election hinged largely on the economy 
and the role of government, officials did not receive a mandate for sweeping new 
social measures. “This last election was not about these issues at all,” said 
Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. “We 
now are concerned about a real overreaching by some state legislators and 
governors that will make it very difficult for women to access reproductive 
health care.”
Daniel S. 
McConchie, vice president for government affairs with Americans United for Life, 
responded that laws restricting abortion have been adopted right along by the 
states and that while he expected large gains in the year ahead, they will be 
part of steady trend.
The abortion 
rate in the United States, which had declined steadily since a 1981 peak of more 
than 29 abortions per 1,000 women, stalled between 2005 and 2008, at slightly 
under 20 abortions per 1,000 women, according to a new report from the 
Guttmacher Institute.
Reported by  ERIK ECKHOLM
Herald Tribune 
I really dont care what you believe is the reasoning behind justifying late term abortion or any abortion for that matter. something has to change regarding this matter, the ability to choose has been abused and exploited by the health officials and technically termed "professionals" and women of today
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