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‘Personhood' for embryos fails, other abortion bills head to governor's desk
‘Personhood' for embryos fails, other abortion bills head to governor's desk

Yahoo

time22-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

‘Personhood' for embryos fails, other abortion bills head to governor's desk

Photo illustration by Getty Images. Voters in Montana won't see a proposed constitutional amendment to confer 'personhood' rights on embryos, but a couple of other bills related to abortion are headed to the desk of Gov. Greg Gianforte. Last week, House Bill 316 sponsored by Rep. Lee Deming, R-Laurel, failed to earn the minimum 100 votes out of 150 in the Montana Legislature needed to present a constitutional amendment to voters. The bill came following the passage in November 2024 of Constitutional Initiative 128 to protect abortion. It passed with 58% of the vote. In a statement Friday, Planned Parenthood Advocates of Montana CEO and President Martha Fuller said Montanans will rest easier knowing the attempt to ignore their wishes and 'undermine the right to an abortion' has failed. 'The government is not now and never will be the expert on the lives, families or pregnancies of Montanans — it's high time for politicians to respect the personal and medical privacy of their constituents,' Fuller said in a statement about HB 316. The bill earned 58 'yes' votes in the House and 33 'yes' votes in the Senate on third readings. The 2025 Montana Legislature has taken up other bills related to abortion, although legislators tabled a number of them. However, House Bill 388 and Senate Bill 154 both are headed to the desk of Gianforte. HB 388, sponsored by Rep. Amy Regier, R-Kalispell, would allow pregnancy centers to operate without regulation. Proponents including the Montana Family Foundation said those centers should not be punished for refusing to facilitate abortions, according to reporting from the Montana State News Bureau. Opponents said those facilities are not required to provide legitimate medical information or protect privacy, and they misinform clients. SB 154, sponsored by Sen. Daniel Emrich, R-Great Falls, prohibits the sale of whole human bodies and human fetal tissue, which is already illegal under federal law. On the Senate floor earlier this session, Emrich said it was 'a great bill' and makes sure bodies and fetal tissue are 'being donated and not sold as a commodity inside the state of Montana.' In the final debate on HB 316, which took place in the Senate on Thursday, Sen. Vince Ricci, R-Billings, said he couldn't imagine a greater violation of human dignity or of privacy than abortion. 'The state has a compelling interest (in) protecting the lives of the most vulnerable human beings, and the human being … in the womb has … a life interest equal to that of his or her mother,' said Ricci, who carried the bill. Sen. Jeremy Trebas, R-Great Falls, said those who supported the protection of abortion approved a measure that is 'immoral and wrong.' 'I think abortion is murder, and I'll catch heck for that I'm sure, but it's the killing of a person, a formed, live person. Making it a right to privacy is baloney,' Trebas said. He said the Montana Supreme Court made an inappropriate link to privacy when it extended it to abortion because 'this is the child's body that we're talking about. And they have a right to life.' Minority Leader Pat Flowers said Montanans don't support the attacks against the right to privacy, and it was time to focus on other issues, such as tax bills. 'Call it baloney or not, it's in the Constitution, and it's an important right,' said Flowers, D-Belgrade. Sen. Cora Neumann, D-Bozeman, said the bill would outlaw in vitro fertilization, and Montanans all love mothers and babies and want more of them in the state. Neumann also asked if the state should control men's bodies. 'If we're going to try to have this type of control over women's bodies, because the fetus is part of the woman's body, are we also going to try to have this type of control over men's bodies?' Neumann said.'Are we going to regulate ejaculation? This is what we're talking about. We are talking about regulating the internal parts of bodies.' Sen. Laura Smith, D-Helena, said the bill could create a 'legal quagmire' for any doctor who needed to provide medical care to a pregnant woman who was experiencing a miscarriage or ectopic pregnancy. 'This legislation would effectively tie doctors' hands rather than allowing them to treat their patients without fear or prosecution,' said Smith, a lawyer.

Following significant debate, National Guard deployment bill fails reading in House
Following significant debate, National Guard deployment bill fails reading in House

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Following significant debate, National Guard deployment bill fails reading in House

Rep. Lee Deming, R-Laurel defense HB 404, regarding National Guard deployment, during floor debate on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. A bill that would have required a Congressional act for the Montana National Guard to be released from the state into 'federal duty' did not pass a second reading on Wednesday afternoon, but only after a spirited and lengthy debate on the floor. House Bill 404, brought by Rep. Lee Deming, R-Laurel, sought to avoid sending Montanans to 'active combat duty' in countries where the United States Congress hadn't approved soldiers to be sent. The bill created controversy over possible loss of funding, allegations by bill proponents that opponents of the bill were giving out free helicopter rides, and assumptions that soldiers didn't know what they signed up for when they joined the guard. In 2024, a drone attack against a U.S. military outpost in Jordan, called Tower 22, killed three U.S. soldiers and injured many National Guardsman. Roughly 3,000 U.S. troops were stationed in Jordan at the time, despite the Biden administration repeatedly saying the United States was not actively at war — a position they maintained following the withdrawal from Afghanistan. Currently, National Guardsman from any state can be deployed to active duty, even though the U.S. is not in a declared war. 'The US has seen abuse of all of our military forces for decades,' Deming told the Daily Montanan. 'The Tower 22 attack is just a symptom of a larger problem that legislation of this kind has tried to address for two decades. There are quite a few examples. The men whose organization first began to sponsor legislation of this type are combat veterans who try to limit the damage done to our service men and women by these undeclared wars.' Deming argued his bill would prevent needless harms, but legislators also debated over the cost. Deming called a $132 million fiscal note attached to the bill 'bogus' and said it was based on 'completely fabricated assumptions.' The note assumes the state would lose federal funding over the bill, $132 million annually over the next four years. It also valued the gear and buildings the Montana National Guard has and said the state could lose 'federal dollars, equipment, cooperative agreements, and funding for state personnel.' Deming said that even if it was true, the result of the bill could be worth it. 'Let's say the fiscal note is correct,' Deming said. 'How much does the mental and physical health problems suffered by our veterans cost the state? The devastation created by deploying our forces into foreign conflicts with no goal and no end brings immense costs.' Rep. George Nikolakakos, R-Great Falls, who was active duty in the Air Force before a seven-year stint in the Montana Air National Guard, spoke against the bill. He derided the assumption that National Guard soldiers didn't have agency and were victims. 'We have this idea that somehow we're sending our boys and girls overseas to die, and they didn't want to go,' Nikolakakos said. 'It's just false. It's a false notion. A blast motion to get the bill out of committee failed on March 3. However, on Tuesday, the committee voted to push it out on its own and it reached the House floor Wednesday morning. During Wednesday's floor session, House Majority Leader Rep. Steve Fitzpatrick, R-Great Falls, made a motion to send the bill to the House Appropriations Committee. Rep. Caleb Hinkle, R-Belgrade, objected to this motion, and Deming said it was an obvious attempt to kill the bill. 'I find this motion to be highly irregular, and frankly, insulting to the National Guard people that we are supposed to protect,' Deming said on the floor. 'Sending this down to Appropriations is killing this bill.' His argument got him time on the floor. 'That was very passionate, so I'm going to put that up on second (reading),' Fitzpatrick said. 'Let's put this up on second, right now.' Following almost an hour of debate, and two separate votes to end debate on the bill, HB 404 failed 58-41.

‘Personhood' bill moves to Montana House Floor
‘Personhood' bill moves to Montana House Floor

Yahoo

time11-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

‘Personhood' bill moves to Montana House Floor

Montana Rep. Lee Deming speaks to the House Judiciary Committee about a proposed amendment to the Montana Constitution which would define personhood from the moment of conception (Photo screeshot Montana Public Affairs Network). Just a little more than 90 days ago, Montana voters soundly approved a state constitutional amendment that enshrined the right to an abortion in state law. A bill championed by Montana House Rep. Lee Deming, R-Laurel, would essentially put the question again to voters in 2026, and many opponents told lawmakers they worried this new 'fetal personhood' bill would go further than any other legislation in the country — and nullify Constitutional Initiative 128. House Bill 316 would require two-thirds of the Legislature's support in order to place the question before Montana residents. The bill would ask Montanans if they support a 'personhood' amendment, which would confer rights to an embryo upon conception, essentially ruling out the use of in vitro fertilization or other methods without risking criminal penalties. Others who testified at the House Judiciary Committee's legislation last Wednesday also worried that the broad and vague language could wreak havoc because of unintended consequences, including end-of-life decisions, known as 'advance care directives.' In November 2024, Montana voters approved CI-128 by more than a 58% margin, which enshrines the constitutional right to an abortion and privacy in medical decisions. Abortion had been legal in Montana, supported by a 1999 Montana Supreme Court ruling that found that Montanans' right to an abortion is tied to the constitutional right to privacy in the Montana Constitution. However, CI-128 now guarantees the right to an abortion as a stand-alone right. HB 316 was approved in committee along party lines, 12-to-8, and now heads to the full Montana House floor. Deming acknowledged that Montanans recently approved CI-128, but likely didn't understand that it would protect late-term abortions, something that Montana medical providers said do not happen in the state, and rarely happen, overwhelmingly because of medical complications. He also told fellow lawmakers that if the thousands of abortions performed in the state had been illegal, maybe CI-128 wouldn't have passed. 'If an amendment can take rights away — and this is a hypothetical, so please bear with me — why not use a bullet to kill all those people 70 or older? After all, they're generally a drain on their families and society and some are inconvenient to have around. I see no material difference between that hypothetical and the thousands of abortions performed in Montana,' Deming said. Through the testimony, many lawmakers and residents testified that the legislation would also mean halting IVF. 'My heart breaks for those who cannot conceive naturally,' Deming said. 'If there was a way to accomplish it without killing so many human beings, but I don't have the solution.' Much of the testimony surround HB 316 fell along the debate lines of CI-128. 'Conception is not a theoretical or philosophical,' said Derek Oestreicher of the Montana Family Foundation. 'It's a scientifically verifiable event that begins at conception.' Dr. Annie Bukacek, a medical professional who also sits on the Montana Public Service Commission, spoke in favor of the bill, and said it was right to target IVF. 'IVF is where untold human lives are destroyed to bring about one life, with enormous cash profits for individual clinics,' she said. Resident Dick Pence testified that human species were the only animals who appear to do something other than protect their young. 'What other female animal on the plant wouldn't give their life to protect their young? This is not true for the women who claim it is their right to choose,' Pence said. 'The self-centeredness of those women.' Ann Angus of Bozeman testified that she is expecting a child in June, thanks to IVF, and asked lawmakers to stop HB 316. 'I've always wanted kids, and I am pregnant thanks to IVF,' she said. Residents also voiced concerns about some of the 'unintended consequences' of the bill, including patients who developed complications or started to miscarry — or the medical providers who would have to attend to them. Some worried that, like in states that had passed similar legislation, Montana would lose medical providers. A shortage of medical providers is a perennial problem in the rural state. Others worried that language in the bill that talked about 'any stage of life' or condition would place advance directives, often used by older patients, many with terminal conditions, at risk. HB 316 also offers no 'carve-outs' or protections in cases of rape or incest. 'It will drive healthcare providers out of state,' said Amber Nichols, who testified as a resident and scientist. 'It will disregard the majority of voters have time and time again supported access to abortion in our state. It will signal to daughters, nieces, sisters, friends and neighbors that healthcare decisions are not theirs alone.' Ella Smith, who spoke on behalf of Blue Mountain Clinic, one of the state's healthcare providers that has managed abortions, said that 'personhood' bills like Deming's are no longer theoretical about consequences for healthcare providers. 'Doctors are being criminalized by not providing care in life-threatening situations,' she said. She said that pregnancies can become emergencies quickly, but some providers have been unwilling to intervene until later, risking complications and even a death of a patient. 'We don't have to guess what happens when laws like this exist — the evidence is all around us,' Smith said. 'The sponsors of this legislation ignore the severe harm which they inflict. Women have died because they lived in a state with comparable laws to HB 316 exist.' Elizabeth Brenneman from the Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence said she worried about pregnant women being criminalized under this law for using drugs or not seeking medical attention. Other opponents pointed out that a similar measure to get the initiative before voters has failed three times during the signature-gathering process, as well as seven times at the Legislature. Keegan Nashan of Livingston said she drove to places like Billings, Wibaux and even the Miles City Bucking Horse sale to gather signatures for CI-128. She said that while not all Montanans agreed with abortion, she kept on hearing the message over and over again. 'Ultimately, what is absolutely certain is that Montanans don't think it's any of the government's business,' she said. Robin Turner, the staff attorney at Legal Voice, said that beyond the challenges of abortion, IVF and healthcare access, she said the bill is problematic from a legal standpoint. 'It puts the pregnant person at odds with the fetus and diminishes the right of the pregnant person,' she said. She told committee members that it's unclear who gets to assert the rights of the fetus. Could an abusive spouse, grandparents, Child Protective Services or the police invoke the rights, she wondered. 'This would mean there's no end to what the state can or can't do,' Turner said. 'Women deserve the final say in what they can do with their bodies and medical care.' Martha Fuller, the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Montana, urged lawmakers to consider the fear such a law will create for pregnant women. She said women may delay seeking medical care, especially if they think they'll be blamed for problems or accused of 'self-managed abortions.' 'Anyone who has been pregnant knows there's a long, often conflicting list of things that you should or shouldn't do,' she said. Fuller said that meanwhile, providers may be reluctant to act, for fear of being criminalized for doing the wrong thing. 'Actions often need to be taken quickly so the chilling effect of people seeking care for pregnancies they wanted and intended to keep could keep them from addressing complications and could be chilling or dangerous,' Fuller said. While the topic of the bill was 'personhood' and centered on pregnant women and fetuses, it often veered into other weighty topics, from slavery to theology. Oestreicher said that before the Civil War, slaves were also not given personhood rights, and this bill would continue to guarantee that all people were afforded equal protection. Rep. SJ Howell, D-Missoula, asked questions of Deming, especially how could the rights of the mother and the rights of the child be separated. For example, Howell questioned if a woman incarcerated for theft could use pregnancy as a means to escape criminal punishment because the food or care in prison or jail was inadequate. 'I'm concerned about how we really address full personhood,' Howell said. 'How do we follow the law?' Deming replied that his interest was in protecting life from conception to natural death. 'It would be two people under the bill, they just occupy the same space,' Deming said. Rep. Ed Stafman, D-Bozeman, who is both a trained rabbi and attorney, wondered if HB 316 stepped on his religious rights, because of differences centering on when the soul enters the body. 'Why should we enshrine your religious beliefs and exclude mine?' Stafman asked Deming. 'I didn't mention religious rights,' Deming said. 'I'm making a legal argument. I didn't bring up religion. You were the one who brought that up.' 'Legally, then, when does the soul enter the body? Can you give me a legal argument?' he asked Deming. 'I think that's irrelevant. It doesn't matter when the soul enters the body. Of course it matters to you, and I as far as this goes. It's not in the bill. It wasn't brought up. It has nothing to do with this bill,' Deming replied. Stafman took a different line of questioning. 'Twenty percent of pregnancies end in miscarriage. And if you're saying that life begins at conception, and if 20% of them end in miscarriage, doesn't that make God a mass murderer?' Stafman asked. 'I have to say that I object to that question,' Deming said. 'And, no.'

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