Pennsylvania Advances Constitutional Amendment on Abortion
Pennsylvania’s state Senate on Friday passed a bill to amend the state’s constitution to declare that there is no constitutional right to taxpayer-funded abortion nor other rights to abortion in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
The proposed Senate Bill 106 will now go to the state House for a vote. If it passes the lower chamber, it will be on the ballot in November.
Blair County Republican Sen. Judy Ward, the bill’s sponsor, said the measure simply maintains the status quo.
In 1985, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that the state constitution does not require taxpayer funding of abortions, in line with federal precedent.
The amendments proposed in SB 106 would not change the Abortion Control Act, nor does the language ban abortions, Ward’s office said in a release. Instead, the legislation preserves critical checks and balances and ensures that abortion laws are made by elected officials.
“State law regarding such an important issue as this should not be made by unelected judges,” Ward said. “This legislation guarantees that the job of making abortion policy will stay in the hands of the people’s elected representatives.”
Pennsylvania’s Democratic state Senate leader, Jay Costa, of the 43rd district, challenged this assertion on Friday.
“If that’s the truth—and this really doesn’t have anything to do with boldly restricting the right of bodily autonomy—it should be done through the regular legislative process,” Costa wrote on Twitter.
He argued that Pennsylvania Republicans were using the constitution “as a tool” to ensure people did not have the right to an abortion in the state.
“What we are doing here today is egregious,” he said. “The constitution is meant to protect the liberties and rights of Pennsylvanians, not to be used as a tool to enshrine prohibiting rights.”
Ward accused opponents of the bill of wielding “passionate and misleading rhetoric” to
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