House Republicans pass 'born-alive' abortion bill
House Republicans on Thursday passed their version of a “born-alive” abortion bill one day after Democrats blocked the Senate version from advancing.
The bill requires health care practitioners to provide the “same degree of professional skill, care, and diligence” for a child born alive during an attempted abortion as they would during normal childbirth.
Republicans have framed the bill as not being anti-abortion but anti-infanticide. Democrats have criticized the legislation as being redundant, as killing infants born alive after an attempted termination, a rare occurrence, is already illegal, and the bill only serves to "criminalize" doctors.
Health care practitioners who fail to comply with the law would face fines and up to five years in jail or both.
The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act previously passed in the House in 2023 with a vote of 220-210-1. At the time, Texas Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar joined Republicans in voting for the bill while Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas) voted “present.” It also previously passed in 2015.
The bill passed in the House on Thursday with a vote of 217-204. One Democrat voted in support for the bill while another voted "present."
Its passage comes just one day before the anti-abortion March for Life in Washington on Friday.
On Wednesday, the Senate Republicans attempted to invoke cloture on their version of the bill, but without the needed 60 votes, the motion failed. Republicans framed the motion's failure as Democrats voting against a bill combating infanticide.
"The bill would have created a new standard of care for physicians providing reproductive health care that is not based in medicine, fact, or science. In fact, it is already law that any child born in America — regardless of the circumstances surrounding that birth — is afforded equal protections," Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (Ill.) said after the motion failed.
Prior to the bill's passage in the House, newly sworn-in Democratic Rep. Kelly Morrison (Minn.), an OB-GYN, blasted the bill as “cruel” to patients.
“Sometimes medical complications can prevent a patient's dreams of building her family from coming true,” Morrison said. “The moment when a patient and her family learn about a lethal fetal medical condition that is incompatible with life; it is devastating. The pain and the grief in that moment is unfathomable. You can never unhear the mother's cries of despair.”
“This bill is cruel. It singles out patients who are facing the worst days of their lives. This bill does not solve a problem,” she added. “Doctors are already both honored and obligated to provide appropriate care for their patients.”
GOP Rep. Michelle Fischbach (Minn.) said the legislation is "not about abortion" but instead about "medical care for babies."
“These children are not junk. They cannot be treated as so much garbage. This legislation tries to say we need to protect them once they were born after the abortion,” Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) shouted on the floor.
“This is humane, pro-child, pro-human rights legislation and I hope my colleagues on the other side realize these children have great value,” added Smith.
Of the available data on infants born alive following an attempted abortion, between 2003 and 2014, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded "143 deaths involving induced terminations.”
In their objections to the bill, several House Democrats shared their experiences of losing wanted pregnancies and choosing to terminate in order to preserve the health of them or their family members.
New York Rep. Timothy M. Kennedy (D) shared how he and his wife learned her pregnancy was no longer viable and threatened her life.
“The last thing we needed was legislation that served to stand between the health of my wife, unborn child and the future of our family,” he added. “If this bill had been law, doctors would have been required to whisk Bridget away from us inhumanely, poke and prod our baby girl with tubes, needles and IVs, causing her needless pain, suffering and torture.”
-
Amid raging fires, House passes contentious forestry bill
The House on Thursday passed legislation that supporters say will improve how the nation manages its forests to prevent fires but opponents argue will undercut environmental safeguards. The ...The Hill - 8h -
House passes Laken Riley Act, sending immigration bill to Trump's desk
The Laken Riley Act, aimed at clamping down on people in the U.S. illegally who commit nonviolent crimes like theft, is expected to be the first bill President Donald Trump signs into law.NBC News - 1d -
Senate Democrats block GOP's 'born-alive' abortion bill
Senate Republicans failed on Wednesday to invoke cloture on a bill legislating care for infants "born alive" during attempted abortions, with the motion largely serving to get Democrats on the ...The Hill - 1d -
House Passes Bill to Deport Immigrants Convicted of Violence Against Women
Scores of Democrats joined Republicans in approving the measure, even though existing law already allows immigrants with contested legal status who are convicted of sex crimes to be deported.The New York Times - Jan. 16 -
House passes bill to ban transgender student-athletes from women's sports
The House passed legislation that would ban transgender athletes from participating in women’s and girls’ sports at schools and institutions receiving federal funds.NBC News - Jan. 14 -
House Passes Bill to Impose Sanctions on I.C.C. Officials for Israeli Prosecutions
The action put the measure on track for likely enactment given strong support for it among Republicans, who now control the Senate, and President-elect Donald J. Trump.The New York Times - Jan. 9 -
House passes Laken Riley Act as 1st bill of new GOP-controlled Congress
Unauthorized immigrants charged with nonviolent crimes could be be deported.ABC News - Jan. 7 -
House passes Laken Riley Act in first bill of new Congress
The House approved its first policy legislation of the new Congress on Tuesday with a bill aimed at addressing illegal immigration.CBS News - Jan. 7 -
Rep. Mike Johnson tells House Republicans Trump wants them to pass a single reconciliation bill
At a closed-door House Republican retreat Saturday morning, newly re-elected House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said President-elect Donald Trump was in favor of passing a single reconciliation ...NBC News - Jan. 5
More from The Hill
-
Omar: Democrats attending Trump’s inauguration ‘sends the wrong message’
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) argued that Democrats who attended President Trump’s Inauguration on Monday were sending the "wrong message." Omar joined CNN’s “The Source” on Thursday evening and was ...The Hill - 1h -
California AG: It would be 'great mistake' to put conditions on wildfire aid
California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D) said in an interview that it would be a “great mistake” to put conditions on federal disaster aid for victims of the ravaging wildfires. “I respectfully ...The Hill - 1h -
Florida Republican says Trump fixing lack of transparency by releasing JFK files
Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.) said she believes President Trump is fixing a lack of government transparency by releasing the files related to former President Kennedy’s assassination. “This was ...The Hill - 2h -
NJ mayor slams 'egregious' ICE raid: 'Newark will not stand by idly'
The mayor of Newark, N.J. slammed the “egregious” raid by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents who, he says, raided a local establishment and detained undocumented immigrants ...The Hill - 2h -
AP says it will use Trump’s name change for Denali but not Gulf of Mexico
The Associated Press said in updated guidance that it will use President Trump’s name change for Denali but not the Gulf of Mexico. In an announcement Thursday, Amanda Barrett, the AP’s vice ...The Hill - 4h
More in Politics
-
Omar: Democrats attending Trump’s inauguration ‘sends the wrong message’
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) argued that Democrats who attended President Trump’s Inauguration on Monday were sending the "wrong message." Omar joined CNN’s “The Source” on Thursday evening and was ...The Hill - 1h -
California AG: It would be 'great mistake' to put conditions on wildfire aid
California Attorney General Rob Bonta (D) said in an interview that it would be a “great mistake” to put conditions on federal disaster aid for victims of the ravaging wildfires. “I respectfully ...The Hill - 1h -
Elon Musk posts Nazi-related puns after backlash over inauguration gesture
Elon Musk has posted a message with a series of Nazi-related puns on X after backlash over a hand gesture he made during President Trump's inauguration celebration. NBC News' Yamiche Alcindor has ...NBC News - 1h -
Florida Republican says Trump fixing lack of transparency by releasing JFK files
Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.) said she believes President Trump is fixing a lack of government transparency by releasing the files related to former President Kennedy’s assassination. “This was ...The Hill - 2h -
NJ mayor slams 'egregious' ICE raid: 'Newark will not stand by idly'
The mayor of Newark, N.J. slammed the “egregious” raid by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents who, he says, raided a local establishment and detained undocumented immigrants ...The Hill - 2h