UPDATED at 4:00 p.m. ET: The people of North Dakota will get to decide whether fetuses deserve the same rights as adult women.
The North Dakota House of Representatives passed a personhood amendment on Friday, one week after the state Senate approved a bill that bans abortion after a fetal heartbeat can be detected. The question of whether “the inalienable right to life of every human being at any stage of development must be recognized and protected,” as the amendment says, will be decided by the state’s voters in 2014.
The house also passed two other anti-abortion measures Friday, meaning Gov. Jack Dalrymple now faces the choice to sign or veto a total of four abortion-related bills. A rally is planned for Monday at the state capitol in Bismarck to protest these legislative attacks on reproductive rights. Several conservative Republicans state lawmakers are planning to attend.
This is the first time that a personhood amendment has been approved by state legislators.
Arkansas and its recently passed 12-week abortion ban are about to be surpassed, if North Dakota Republicans get their way.
The state’s Republican-controlled Senate sent two anti-abortion bills to Gov. Jack Dalrymple for signature last week and could vote on four more bills limiting reproductive rights as early as Friday. The bills, which would ban all abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected and make it more difficult to terminate pregnancies complicated by genetic defects, would make North Dakota’s abortion restrictions the strictest in the United States, essentially outlawing any and all procedures after six weeks. “Restrictions on abortion only take away safe abortion,” Tammi Kromenaker, director of the Red River Women’s Clinic in Fargo–the state’s only abortion services provider–told msnbc.









