North Carolina Senate Overrides Governor’s Veto of Bill to Protect Babies From Abortions

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   May 16, 2023   |   5:37PM   |   Charlotte, North Carolina

North Carolina Governor Roy Coopes veto of a common sense bill to protect babies from abortions has lost its first of two battles. The state Senate has voted to override his veto of a modest bill to protect babies from abortions starting at 12 weeks.

Cooper spent last week crisscrossing the state and  desperately making the case why abortion is a good thing for the Tar Heel State as he hopes to somehow convince one or more legislator not to override his veto of a common sense bill that would ban abortions after 12 weeks.

His pro-abortion campaign failed in its first test.

The North Carolina Senate voted 30-20 on a strict party-line vote to override the veto – with pro-life Republicans voting to protect babies and Democrats voting for more abortions.

“I encourage you to override this dishonest governor’s veto,” Sen. Vickie Sawyer (R-Iredell) said in introducing the override vote.

Sen. Amy Galey (R-Alamance) offered a top-10 list of good things about the bill. “An unborn baby is not a sack of cells in a uterus,” she said and that sometimes “the government must intervene to protect that child.”

The bill now heads to the state House, and an affirmative vote there will make it law.

ACTION ALERT: Contact Tricia Cotham at 919-733-5749 or [email protected] and John bradford at 919-733-5828 or [email protected] and urge them to vote to override Cooper’s veto on the 12-week abortion ban.

The modest bill bans abortions after 12 weeks and include numerous provisions to provide support for pregnant women as well as making sure they can receive emergency health care. The Senate voted 29-20 to approve the Care for Women, Children, and Families Act a day after the House also passed it on a veto-proof margin.

“It will effectively ban access to reproductive freedom earlier and sometimes altogether for many women because of new restrictions and requirements,” Cooper posted to Twitter. “This is why Republicans are ramming it through with no chance to amend. I will veto this extreme ban and need everyone’s help to hold it.”

The bill doesn’t ban access to reproductive freedom — because when an abortion occurs reproduction has already taken place and the freedom has been exercised. And the bill has numerous amendments and changes that lawmakers agreed to in order to make it more palatable for legislators who didn’t want to pass a bill protecting babies from conception or starting at 6 weeks when their heartbeat begins.

The override partially depends on Rep. Tricia Cotham, a former Democrat who supported abortion but moderated her views after she recently became a Republican. Cotham voted for the 12 week bill to protect babies and help women.

Other lawmakers Cooper hopes to pick off include Rep. Ted Davis, R-New Hanover, Rep. John Bradford, R-Mecklenburg, and Sen. Michael Lee, R-New Hanover.

ACTION ALERT: Contact members of the North Carolina House and Senate to urge them to override Governor Cooper’s veto of the 12-week ban.

North Carolina law currently bans nearly all abortions after 20 weeks, so the new legislation would provide further protecting for babies from abortions. The new measure would provide limited exceptions for cases of rape, incest or fetal abnormality and currently law already provides a life of the mother exception.

The new bill is expected to save thousands of babies from abortions every year who otherwise would have been killed.

Based on the most recent CDC data, protecting unborn children at 12 weeks could potentially save 3,000 babies from abortions every year, not including reducing abortion tourism from other states that have legal protections for unborn children.

Medical experts testified in support of the bill, including Dr. Susan Bane, FACOG, a board-certified Greenville OB-GYN with more than 20 years in practice; Dr. Marty McCaffrey, a professor of pediatrics and a Charlotte Lozier Institute associate scholar; and Dr. Jeffrey Wright, FACOG.

Provisions of the Care for Women, Children and Families Act include:

  • No mail-order abortion pills – maintains current law requiring abortion pills to be administered in person by a doctor, strengthens informed consent on the danger of abortion pills, requires an in-person examination, prohibits advertising illegal sales of abortion pills.
  • Protects abortion survivors – babies born alive in failed abortions are entitled to the same legal protections and standard of medical care as any other baby of the same gestational age.
  • Combats discrimination – protects unborn children from discrimination based on sex, race or Down syndrome.
  • Protects women’s health, safety and informed consent:
    • Requires the same health and safety standards for abortion facilities as for other ambulatory surgical centers.
    • Ensures that women are not rushed or coerced into unwanted abortions.
    • Safeguards the life of the mother in the event of a medical emergency.
    • Specifically makes clear that treatment for ectopic pregnancy or miscarriage does not constitute abortion.
  • Limits elective and late-term abortions – exceptions include rape and incest up to five months and life-limiting fetal anomalies up to six months, with the requirement that palliative care consultation be offered.

The bill provides $160 million in support for children, families and maternal health, including:

  • $75 million to expand access to child care.
  • Nearly $59 million (not including federal matching funds) for foster care, kinship care and children’s homes.
  • $20 million for maternity and paternity leave for teachers and state employees.
  • Over $16 million (including federal matching funds) to reduce infant and maternal mortality.
  • $3 million to help mothers and fathers complete community college.

Caitlin Connors, southern regional director for SBA Pro-Life America, praised North Carolina lawmakers for reaching consensus to strengthen protections for women and children. She told LifeNews:

“The Care for Women, Children and Families Act is deeply pro-life and pro-woman and a major step forward for North Carolina. This bill would protect thousands of lives a year from brutal abortions at a point when unborn babies have beating hearts, recognizable faces and unique fingerprints forming, and the capacity to suffer, as well as stopping dangerous mail-order abortion pills and more. It demonstrates the legislature’s serious commitment to giving women and families in North Carolina the support they need to thrive. We thank our allies, particularly our Pro-Life Caucus member Sen. Krawiec, Speaker Moore and Senate Leader Berger, Tami Fitzgerald and all the local advocates who’ve championed this bill and we hope to see it swiftly passed. Governor Cooper and Attorney General Stein oppose the will of the people at their political peril.”

Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America announced the findings of a new poll revealing that nearly two-thirds (62%) of voters in the state support protecting unborn children at 12 weeks. Results also show that 67% of the state’s voters support North Carolina’s existing parental consent laws.

Nearly two-thirds of North Carolina voters support protecting unborn children by at least 12 weeks, according to a poll by Differentiator Data. Only 22% of voters agree with allowing abortion up until birth, the position held by Gov. Roy Cooper and Attorney General Josh Stein. The poll surveyed 500 registered voters from January 9-12, 2023, and has a margin of error of 4.5%.

  • 62% of North Carolinians support legislation to protect unborn babies by at least 12 weeks, with exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother.
    • 68% of Unaffiliated voters support such legislation.
    • 61% of women want to protect babies by 12 weeks.
  • North Carolinians widely support the state’s existing laws requiring parental consent (67%), a 72-hour waiting period (57%) and an ultrasound prior to an abortion (55%).

By 12 weeks’ gestation, all major organs have formed and the heart has beat over 10 million times. At this stage, babies suck their thumbs and already have a right-hand or left-hand preference. Prominent facial features including the nose, cheeks, eyes and ears are recognizable; teeth are developing; and the body responds to touch. For more information on fetal development, see Charlotte Lozier Institute’s “12 Facts at 12 Weeks.”

ACTION ALERT: Contact members of the North Carolina House and Senate to urge them to override Governor Cooper’s veto of the 12-week ban.