
Culture & Conversation Abortion
This law was last updated on Jun 13, 2019
This law is Anti–Choice
HB 771
Failed to Pass
Jan 31, 2019
Primary Sponsors: 1
Total Sponsors: 1
HB 771 would prohibit certain selective abortions relating to sex, race, or Down syndrome.
The bill would prohibit any person from performing or inducing an abortion if they know that the pregnant person is seeking the abortion solely due to a prenatal diagnosis, test, or screening indicating Down syndrome or the potential of Down syndrome in a fetus.
The bill would also prohibit any person from performing or inducing an abortion on a pregnant person if the individual knows that the pregnant person is seeking the abortion solely because of the sex or race of the fetus.
Any physician or other person who violates the provisions of this act would be subject to civil and criminal penalties.
Reporting Requirements
This law would require a physician to certify in their reports that they did not have any knowledge that the pregnant person sought the abortion solely because of a prenatal diagnosis, test, or screening indicating Down Syndrome or the potential of Down Syndrome; or that the patient sought the abortion solely because of the sex or race of the fetus.
Sex-selection abortions are not a widespread problem in the United States. However, anti-choice activists cite three studies documenting the use of sex-selection abortion primarily among a small number of immigrant women. The National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum notes that a ban similar to the proposed Missouri ban “targets and thus limits reproductive health access for Asian American & Pacific Islander women, who anti-choicers say are the ones guilty of this abortion practice. We know the real solution to ending the preference for sons in some families is getting to the root of the problem: gender inequity. If lawmakers truly want to help us, we call on them to promote equal pay, access to education, health equity, and ending violence against women.”
Related Legislation
Similar to HB 1867/SB 724 (2018), SB 96, (2017), SB 802, and HB 1815 (2016), all of which failed to pass.
Latest Action
1/31/19 – Introduced.
Primary Sponsor