#EndTheLies, Declare Reproductive Rights Advocates as Senate GOP Pushes 20-Week Abortion Ban

September 14, 2020 0 By JohnValbyNation

Reproductive rights advocates came together on Capitol Hill Tuesday morning to combat misinformation used by Republican lawmakers to push anti-choice legislation—including a bill currently before Congress that would impose a nationwide 20-week abortion ban.

“Instead of listening to the expertise of medical organizations, healthcare providers, and the real-life situations of patients and families, anti-abortion politicians used this hearing to spread misinformation and stigma about abortion care.”
—Dr. Kristyn Brandi, PRH

Pro-choice advocates’ demands to #StopTheBans and #EndTheLies came in response to a 10am Senate Judiciary Committee hearing called by Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) to promote the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act (S.160), which the senator has sponsored since 2013.

“This hearing is a political stunt that has real consequences,” said Dr. Kristyn Brandi of Physicians for Reproductive Health (PRH).

“Instead of listening to the expertise of medical organizations, healthcare providers, and the real-life situations of patients and families, anti-abortion politicians used this hearing to spread misinformation and stigma about abortion care,” Brandi added. “This is plain wrong.”

Under Graham’s proposed legislation, a healthcare provider who performs or attempts to perform the procedure after 20 weeks post-fertilization could be fined, jailed for up to five years, or both. The only exceptions for the time limit would be to save the life of the pregnant person and cases of rape or incest.

Graham claimed during his opening remarks at the hearing that “there is significant scientific evidence that abortion inflicts tremendous pain on the unborn child” and once Americans “understand” that, there will be widespread support for banning the procedure after 20 weeks.

Critics took issue with both his claims about public opinion and medical science:

Ranking Member Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who denounced the bill as unconstitutional and dangerous, argued that “today’s debate is not about passing legislation to improve medical care—it’s about advancing an ideological agenda.”

Challenging Graham’s claims about pain, Feinstein quoted from a memo by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which says that “the fetus does not even have the physiological capacity to perceive pain until at least 24 weeks of gestation.”

FactCheck.org, after reviewing relevant research and speaking with several experts, concluded in 2015 that “a firm starting point for pain in the developing fetus is essentially impossible to pin down, and that definitive claims regarding pain perception at 20 weeks are unfounded.”

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