Anti-abortion groups adopt stronger tactics
Associated Press
COLUMBUS
Anti-abortion activists recently have conducted hidden-camera stings at clinics, put up a billboard declaring abortion the No. 1 threat to blacks, and on Wednesday performed ultrasounds on pregnant women in front of Ohio legislators.
Emboldened by new Republican majorities and a political climate they see as sympathetic, abortion foes are mounting a renewed assault on Roe v. Wade — and employing some in-your-face tactics to do it.
“They’re trying to find a way to reframe this issue, and using this imagery is the way they’re trying to do this,” said Thad Hall, a political scientist at the University of Utah and author of a recent book on abortion politics.
At the Ohio Statehouse, the anti-abortion group Faith2Action unveiled its “heartbeat bill” to outlaw abortions after the first detectable fetal heartbeat. If passed, it would be the most restrictive abortion law in America, affecting pregnancies as few as six weeks along.
Though it is almost certain to be challenged as unconstitutional under Roe v. Wade, which upheld a woman’s right to an abortion until the fetus is viable, usually at 22 to 24 weeks, nearly half of the GOP-controlled House has signed on to it. Its prospects are not clear in the Senate, where Republicans also hold a majority.
Faith2Action rounded up two women early in their pregnancies and gave them ultrasounds before a packed House Health Committee hearing so legislators could see and hear the fetal hearts.
At the front of the hearing room, each woman, wearing a concealing gown, had her belly rubbed with a conductive gel, and a nurse then rolled the wand over it to produce the ultrasound image. The grainy, ghostly, black-and-white picture was projected onto a big screen, with the quivering heart highlighted in vivid colors. The gentle lub-dub of the heart could be heard over the room’s sound system.
Ducia Hamm, executive director of a pregnancy counseling center in Ashland, Ohio, highlighted the picture with a laser pointer.
Rep. Nickie Antonio, a Democrat who opposes the bill, nevertheless thanked Hamm for bringing back memories of her own pregnancy.
Hamm said lawmakers could have simply listened to testimony on the stages of fetal development, “but we all know that words are great, but pictures are worth a thousand words.”
Kellie Copeland, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio, said the presentation turned the hearing into a “circus.”
The shock-value strategy is by no means new. Imagery designed to tug at heartstrings or disturb viewers is familiar to anyone who has driven along a highway and seen anti-abortion billboards featuring pictures of fetuses or smiling infants. On the other side of the debate, abortion rights activists have handed out coat hangers or used pictures of them to symbolize the dangers of back-alley abortions.
The heartbeat bill’s author, Janet Folger Porter, executive director of Faith2Action, defended Wednesday’s demonstration against complaints it was a circus.
“What we saw today was the beating hearts of these babies, in hopes that these legislators will allow these babies’ hearts to continue to beat,” she said. “That’s the point.”
One of the women who took part in the presentation, 25-year-old Erin Glockner, who is nine weeks pregnant, said she wasn’t embarrassed or hesitant.
“I just think every child has a right to life whether their parents want to keep them for themselves or give them to a family that wants them,” she said. “That’s why I think it’s important. They can’t speak for themselves, so somebody’s got to.”
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