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Missouri Lawmakers Could Consider Copying Texas Abortion Law

A group of protestors stand on the steps of a courthouse in St. Louis, holding signs that say "Stop the bans" and "Abortion access for all".
Jim Salter
/
Associated Press
About 200 abortion rights demonstrators gathered outside the Old Courthouse in St. Louis, for a rally on Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021. Speakers warned that Missouri will likely pursue a restrictive abortion law similar to Texas.

Missouri鈥檚 Republican-led Legislature could soon be considering legislation similar to a , and abortion-rights advocates protested that prospect Thursday before a bill was even written.

About 200 abortion-rights protesters rallied on the steps of the old St. Louis courthouse against the possibility of further restrictions on the procedure.

Karla Stribling, 56, of Warrenton, said she鈥檚 worried that the Texas law 鈥 the most restrictive in the nation 鈥 for Missouri and other states.

The Texas law prohibits abortions once medical professionals can detect cardiac activity, which usually happens around six weeks, before some women know they鈥檙e pregnant.

The Justice Department on Thursday , and courts have blocked similar restrictions elsewhere. But Texas鈥 law leaves enforcement up to private citizens through civil lawsuits, which could help it survive legal challenges.

鈥淎t less than six weeks, a lot of women don鈥檛 know they鈥檙e pregnant,鈥 Stribling said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be so hard to get an abortion and only the wealthy will be able to get one, like in the past. It鈥檚 all going backward.鈥

Republican Rep. Mary Elizabeth Coleman, of Arnold, said she plans to file a bill based partly on the new Texas law. It鈥檚 likely many others will follow suit in the heavily Republican state Legislature, especially heading into 2022 elections as GOP candidates look to capitalize on their conservative credentials.

Missouri lawmakers in 2019 passed a bill that would ban abortions as early as the eighth week of pregnancy, but it鈥檚 . A hearing on the case in federal appeals court is scheduled for Sept. 21.

Coleman said she hopes to enact legislation that won鈥檛 perpetually be tied up in legal challenges. She plans to craft a bill that, as in Texas, would allow private citizens to sue abortion providers.

鈥淚t would be the next piece of making sure that Missouri is abortion free,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e doing everything we can to realize that goal and will continue to do so.鈥

Any legislative action on abortion is still months away.

Republican Gov. Mike Parson has said he doesn鈥檛 plan to call lawmakers back for a special session before their regular legislative session begins in January. Parson鈥檚 spokeswoman repeated that he has no plans for a special session on abortion following the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 to allow the Texas law to take effect.

Republican lawmakers have said they planned to introduce bills using the Texas law as a model, hoping it provides a pathway to enacting the kind of abortion crackdown they have sought for years.

Associated Press