The Texas House of Representatives early Monday passed Senate Bill 5, which restricts women’s access to reproductive health services and abortion, after nine hours of debate. The special-session vote was ordered by Republican Governor Rick Perry.
Republicans in the State Senate have until midnight Tuesday, when the special session ends, to pass the bill—Democrats in the chamber said they intend to filibuster.
Introduced by Republican State Representative Jodie Laubenberg, Senate Bill 5 is an omnibus “fetal pain” bill that would ban abortions in Texas after 20 weeks and require any and all abortion doctors to be able to admit patients to nearby hospitals. The bill, likely to be signed by Governor Perry should it pass the House and Senate, would also limit abortions to surgical centers.
Also at stake are House Bills 16 and 60, which Laubenberg postponed until after the end of the special session on Tuesday.
In what the Associated Press characterized as a “a highly unusual and partisan move,” the House Republicans rushed to a 95-34 preliminary approval vote on the bill. When word broke of the House passage, protesters mobilized against the bill sent the word out via social media on Monday afternoon to show up to the state Capitol to protest.
(Update: Republican state senators put forth a motion Monday afternoon to suspend its normal 24-hour waiting period to consider House changes, but that motion failed on 19-11 vote. That is significant because as Democratic state senator Wendy Davis noted on Twitter shortly after that motion failed, the “amount of time needed to filibuster just shortened significantly.”)









