Abortion Center Safety Passes Senate On Lt. Governor Bolling’s Tie-Breaker Vote!

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February 24, 2011

After a long and passionate Senate floor debate that spanned a few hours over two days, the Virginia Senate voted 20-20 this afternoon to direct the Department of Health to promulgate regulations for abortion centers. After a brief pause for the Senate clerk to announce the vote, Lt. Governor Bill Bolling cast his constitutionally authorized tie-breaking vote in favor of the bill. It now will go to Governor Bob McDonnell for his signature. After more than two decades of hiding behind a veil of political secrecy, abortion centers in Virginia will face greater scrutiny and better health standards.

It was the first time ever that such legislation has even reached the Senate floor, despite numerous bills passed by the House. Each year, including earlier this session, the Senate kills the legislation in committee. But all 18 Republicans held together and two brave pro-life Democrats, Senators Phil Puckett (D-38, Tazewell) and Chuck Colgan (D-29, Manassas), resisted pressure from their caucus’ leadership.

While the session has gone according to script this year, with the House passing and the Senate Education and Health Committee killing pro-life legislation, a dramatic turn occurred only a few days ago, in last days of session. SB 924, patroned by Senator Ryan McDougle (R-4, Hanover), which directs the Board of Health to promulgate regulations for certain health care facilities, passed the Senate and went to the House of Delegates. Delegate Kathy Byron (R-22, Lynchburg) offered an amendment to add abortion centers. Liberals challenged its germaneness, but after consulting with his parliamentarian, House Speaker Bill Howell (R-28, Stafford) ruled it in order and the House passed it overwhelmingly. That change required it to return to the Senate where the GOP caucus began to coalesce around the amendment. The vote was scheduled yesterday, but after a half-hour of debate it was passed by until today. Senate Democrat leaders pressured its two wayward colleagues, but at the outset of the tenor of today’s 90-minute debate it was apparent there were no cracks in the coalition.

Unfortunately, opponents devoid of logic but full of less-than-genuine arguments, demagogued the issue. At one point Senator Janet Howell (D-32, Fairfax) mocked Senator Mark Obenshain’s (R-26, Harrisonburg) recitation of federal court decisions upholding abortion center regulations, even though he was replying to her colleagues’ calls for proof of legal precedent. It prompted this exchange. Majority Leader Dick Saslaw (D-35, Springfield) told his colleagues to “get a life!” if they thought the bill was about women’s safety, ignoring his own colleagues’ faux concerns for the constitution.

Senator John Edwards (D-21, Roanoke) repeatedly claimed the bill was unconstitutional with wild assertions and vague stretches of case law, all of which were refuted by Senator Obenshain, who cited federal appeals and U.S. Supreme Court decisions. One was Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which Senator Edwards said ruled such regulations illegal. Senator Obenshain replied that “standing up and saying so doesn’t make it so,” and read from the court’s opinion which plainly disproved Senator Edwards’ assertions.

Several liberal senators predicted horrors such as back alley abortions even though states such as South Carolina regulate abortion centers with no such reports and Virginia regulated abortion centers until 1983. They also claimed first-trimester abortions were among the “safest procedures” despite absolutely no corroborating evidence because there are no reporting requirements mandated in Virginia. Senator Dave Marsden (D-37, Fairfax) even compared the bill to the poll tax and efforts to keep minorities from voting in the Jim Crow era.

Another desperate aspect of the debate was the demand by several liberal Democrats that Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli issue an opinion, perhaps the first time they’ve wanted his advice. Of course, it was a tactic to delay and kill the bill. Senator Edwards sarcastically said the attorney general would love to defend the bill if it became law because of the other legal actions he’s pursued. But the fact was, and they knew it, he issued an opinion in August in support of the constitutionality of such regulations. He even accommodated senators with a letter composed during a Senate recess — which added to the longevity of the debate.

Opponents’ arguments, so twisted, inevitably contradicted each other, with Senator Howell’s unwitting admission that abortion is, in fact, used for contraception when she said the bill would take away one method of “determining the size of families.”

This was a monumental vote and a historic day. The forces of life, after years of pursuit, finally won an incremental and commonsense victory. Thank you to all who contacted their senators on this important issue! We now look forward to working within the regulatory process to ensure the regulations by the Board of Health ensure abortion centers are safe for women who make the unfortunate choice of abortion.

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10 Responses to “Abortion Center Safety Passes Senate On Lt. Governor Bolling’s Tie-Breaker Vote!”

  1. [...] Abortion Center Safety Passes Senate On Lt. – FamilyFoundationBlog.com [...]

  2. [...] Posted on February 25, 2011 by Tom Salmon As reported by FAMILYFOUNDATIONBLOG.COM in Abortion Center Safety Passes Senate On Lt. Governor Bolling’s Tie-Breaker Vote!, the Virginia Commonwealth will now regulate abortion [...]

  3. [...] own VP for Policy and Communications, Chris Freund, will participate in a live blog interview about yesterday’s historic vote to regulate abortion centers, which will include a representative from NARAL. Please click here and participate in the debate [...]

  4. Jack Lee says:

    Praise GOD! Life is Life!

  5. [...] Click here to read the transcript of the online interview Family Foundation Vice President of Policy and Communications Chris Freund participated in earlier today with The Shad Plank blog on the big abortion center licensing vote yesterday. The Virginia Senate, yesterday, passed a bill mandating the Board of Health to institute regulations on abortion centers. It was historic in several ways: Not only did it pass, but it was the first time ever that such a bill even got on the Senate floor. In addition, the vote tied at 20, necessitating a rare tie-breaking vote by Lt. Governor Bill Bolling. [...]

  6. [...] We hope that you are savoring last week’s victory. At our weekly General Assembly session devotion Friday, we were reminded that God is sovereign and directs those in power. While we know that a lot of hard work went into this legislative victory, and many legislators and elected officials took a brave stand, we are well aware that our God is deserving of all the praise for this historic vote! [...]

  7. [...] Norman Prince: died October 15, 1916 Victor Chapman: died in June 1916 Kiffin Rockwell: died September 23, 1916 Dennis Dowd: the skilled pilot, died in an airplane accident at Bucairdrome in August, 1916 William Thaw: The Pittsburg Millionaire Elliot Christopher Cowdin Bert Hall Paul Pavelka James R. MacConnell Edward Mandell Stone: a graduate of Harvard and first American volunteer killed Henry W. Farnsworth: killed in Champagne Alan Seeger: a poet and an idealists John Earle Fiske: a former American soldier, died June 16, 1915 Russell A. Kelly: died June 16, 1915 Nelson Larson: died July 4th, 1916 Frank Clair: of Columbus, died from wounds suffered in A great related post about this: http://poptimal.com/2011/02/american-idol-review-nuts-of-wonder/ A great related post about this: http://www.familyfoundationblog.com/2011/02/24/abortion-center-safety-passes-senate-on-lt-governor-b… [...]

  8. [...] Times-Dispatch, two of the 20 reasons why this year’s General Assembly mattered were the abortion center safety bill and the proposed constitutional amendment to protect property rights. Both, at number one and nine, [...]

  9. [...] the summer heat. Maybe it’s a way to shake loose some dollars from donors. Who knows? But now that abortion centers finally will have some oversight, the world is coming to an end. It’s the same old scare [...]

  10. [...] meet to discuss the permanency of abortion center safety regulations it adopted last year after historic legislation passed the 2011 General Assembly giving the board the authority to do so. Those regulations, however, are “emergency [...]

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