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Missouri AG Eric Schmitt asks Supreme Court to hear abortion restrictions

Missouri AG Eric Schmitt asks Supreme Court to hear abortion restrictions
MICHAE THIS HEARTBEAT BILL IS THE TOUGHEST ANTIABORTION BILL IN THE HISTORY OF THE STATE OF MISSOURI. ITS PASSAGE TODAY SPARKED PROTESTS IN THE STATE CAPITAL. THE PRO-CHOICE DEMONSTRATORS TRIED TO DISRUPT THE HOUSE PROCEEDINGS, AND THEY WERE THROWN OUT. THEY CONTINUED PROTESTS IN THE ROTUNDA. THIS ILL PANTS ABORTIONS AFTER EIGHT WEEKS. IT MAKES NO EXCEPTION FOR RAPE, INCET, OR HUMAN TRAFFICKING. IT DOES ALLOW FOR AN ABORTION IF THERE IS A MEDICAL EMERGENCY. IT IS THE CLOSEST THE STATE IS COME TO MAKING ALL ABORTIONS ILLEGAL. I THINK WE’RE GETTING CLOSER TO THAT GOAL. WE HAVE A LETTER OF WONDERFUL PRO-LIFE RESOURCES IN MISSOURI. >> THIS BILL AND THE OTHER, THEY KNOW THEY ARE UNCONSTITUTIONAL. THAT IS THE WHOLE POINT. THEY ARE PASSING THESE BILLS SO THEY CAN CHALLENGE THIS AND THE SUPREME COURT. MICHAE THERE IS NO DOUBT THAT GOVERNOR MIKE PARSON WILL SIGN THIS BILL IN THE NEXT FEW WEEKS. A MISSOURI HEARTBEAT BILL THAT BANS ABORTIONS IN THE STATE AFTER EIGHT WEEKS FOR NO EXCEPTION FOR RAPE, INCEST, OR
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Missouri AG Eric Schmitt asks Supreme Court to hear abortion restrictions
Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt asked the U.S. Supreme Court to consider an appeal of a ruling striking down new restrictions on when abortions can occur. Schmitt said he filed a request Thursday for the nation's highest court to hear arguments on a 2019 state law that bans abortions as soon as eight weeks into pregnancy and also prohibits abortions based on a Down syndrome diagnosis.A three-judge panel of the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last month upheld a lower court injunction prohibiting Missouri from enforcing the provisions.Schmitt's court filing says the Supreme Court should consider whether Missouri's restrictions are “reasonable regulations on abortion” and should also use the case to decide whether to overturn its Roe v. Wade precedent granting a right to abortion. Legislators who helped draft the Missouri law had said it was meant to withstand court challenges instead of sparking them. It included a provision stating that if the eight-week ban was struck down, then a series of less-restrictive abortion limits would kick in at 14, 18 or 20 weeks. But the courts blocked enforcement of all those limits.

Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt asked the U.S. Supreme Court to consider an appeal of a ruling striking down new restrictions on when abortions can occur.

Schmitt said he filed a request Thursday for the nation's highest court to hear arguments on a 2019 state law that bans abortions as soon as eight weeks into pregnancy and also prohibits abortions based on a Down syndrome diagnosis.

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A three-judge panel of the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last month upheld a lower court injunction prohibiting Missouri from enforcing the provisions.

Schmitt's court filing says the Supreme Court should consider whether Missouri's restrictions are “reasonable regulations on abortion” and should also use the case to decide whether to overturn its Roe v. Wade precedent granting a right to abortion.

Legislators who helped draft the Missouri law had said it was meant to withstand court challenges instead of sparking them. It included a provision stating that if the eight-week ban was struck down, then a series of less-restrictive abortion limits would kick in at 14, 18 or 20 weeks. But the courts blocked enforcement of all those limits.