Elective abortions up to and including the moment of birth. Healthy, 9-month-year-old baby killed at the moment of birth. Thats what Jon Tester and the Democrats have voted for.
Tim Sheehy, Montana GOP candidate for U.S. Senate, said in a June 8 debate
Tim Sheehy, the Republican candidate seeking to unseat Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana and give U.S. Senate control to the GOP, is campaigning on what he calls Testers and Democrats extreme position on abortion.
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In a televised debate June 8, Sheehy accused Tester and Democrats of voting for elective abortions up to and including the moment of birth. That statement prompted Tester to respond: To say were killing babies at 40 weeks is total BS.
Sheehy has made this accusation on his campaign website, which says, Jon Tester supports elective abortion on demand up until the moment of birth. Think about that again: Jon Tester supports aborting a healthy, full-term baby the day before its due. That is the extreme position here. Similar statements have been made in the campaigns social media posts.
Painting the Democratic candidate with, in Sheehys words, an extreme position on abortion is a familiar conservative campaign strategy and campaign talking point this election cycle. But how does it hold up?
Some Recent History
Asked for evidence to support Sheehys accusations, Sheehys campaign spokesperson, Katie Martin, said the Republican candidate was referring to Testers vote for the Womens Health Protection Act, which failed to pass the Senate in 2022. She cited the bills provisions that said health providers and patients would have the right to perform and receive abortion services without certain limitations or requirements impeding access.
Anti-abortion advocates say the measure, which has been reintroduced in the current Congress, would create a loophole eliminating any limits to aborting a fetus later in pregnancy. And, rather than define when a fetus is viable during pregnancy, the bill would leave the question of viability to the health provider, who is financially motivated to perform abortions, according to Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, a nonprofit group supporting anti-abortion candidates, including Sheehy.
It would impose no-limits abortion on demand in all 50 states at any point in pregnancy, said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America. Email Sign-Up
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In 2022, the legislation failed two votes in the Senate before the U.S. Supreme Courts Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization decision removed federal protections for abortion access and left the issue to the states to decide. Tester voted for the measure both times, but the bill failed to advance after votes of 46-48 and 49-51.
Alina Salganicoff, director of the Womens Health Policy Program at KFF, said nothing in the Womens Health Protection Act supports an abortion up to the moment of birth. Rather, the legislation would allow a health provider to perform abortions without obstacles such as waiting periods, tests deemed medically unnecessary, unnecessary in-person visits, or other restrictions imposed by states.
The bill would explicitly allow an abortion after a fetus is viable when, according to the legislation, in the good-faith medical judgment of the treating health care provider, continuation of the pregnancy would pose a risk to the pregnant patients life or health.
This is not abortion on demand until the moment of birth, Salganicoff said. Even if politicians and anti-abortion activists make this claim, there are no clinicians that provide abortions moments before birth.
Besides the Womens Health Protection Act, the Sheehy campaign cited Testers opposition to born-alive legislation meant to protect babies who survive botched abortions.
At what week does he think it’s inappropriate for medical providers to perform an abortion? Martin said of Tester. That would clear up his stance on the issue. Based on his voting record, it suggests he does, in fact, support abortion on demand up until the moment of birth.
In 2002, Congress passed a born-alive law that gave legal protections to infants who survive abortions. A stalled 2022 bill sought to expand that law to add criminal penalties to health professionals who do not take steps to preserve the life of any child born. Montana voters rejected a similar ballot question in 2022.
Tester was elected to the Senate four years after the first bill passed and a vote was not taken on the 2022 measure.
Looking at the Data
Instances of fetuses surviving abortions are rare. So are abortions performed later in pregnancy: Just 1% of all abortions in the U.S. happen at or after 21 weeks of gestation. (The percentage of abortions that occur when the fetus is presumed to be viable, 24 weeks or later, is presumably lower, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does not break out abortion rates for that period.)
An analysis by SBA Pro-Life Americas research arm, the Charlotte Lozier Institute, concluded that 6% of abortions performed in 2020, or an estimated 55,800 abortions, happened at or after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
Most late-term abortions are elective, performed on healthy women with healthy babies for the same reasons given for first-trimester abortions, Dannenfelser said.
SBA Pro-Life cites abortions at 15 weeks and later because that is the stage of development at which a fetus can feel pain, according to the group. That is the same rationale behind Republican Sen. Lindsay Grahams 15-week abortion ban legislation introduced in 2022.
But the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says the science conclusively establishes that a fetus does not have the capacity to feel pain until 24 or 25 weeks.
Every medical organization that has examined this issue and peer-reviewed studies on the matter have consistently reached the conclusion that abortion before this point does not result in the perception of pain in a fetus, according to the OB-GYN medical group.
Katrina Kimport, a professor in the University of California-San Franciscos Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, said born-alive laws are trying to regulate something that doesnt happen.
Kimport, whose research involved interviewing 30 people in 2018 who had abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy, and 10 more from 2021 to 2022, also criticized Sheehys use of elective abortion. In her view, that terminology reflects a political colloquialism thats come to mean an abortion that is optional. Thats different from the medical definition, she said, in which an elective procedure is one that may be necessary but is not an emergency and can be scheduled for a particular date, such as knee surgery.
Women have abortions later in pregnancy either because they find out new information or because of economic or political barriers, Kimport said.
I have never spoken to somebody whose abortion decision was not informed by deep thought and consideration, she said.
Trying to Change the Debate
Mary Ziegler is a University of California-Davis law professor who specializes in the law, history, and politics of reproduction, health care, and conservatism. She said Sheehys argument reprises a Republican talking point that abortion opponents have made for decades.
Similar arguments are being heard nationwide as 10 states consider ballot measures to constitutionally protect abortion this election cycle.
Republicans such as Sheehy are accusing Democrats of being extreme on abortion partly to steer the discussion away from their own uncertain position, Ziegler said. The anti-abortion bloc is a key part of the GOP base, but since the Dobbs ruling, voters in seven states, including Montana, have added or upheld abortion rights in elections.
They cant really disavow what pro-life groups want as extreme because many of their base voters would be horified by that, Ziegler said. But they cant embrace it because then many swing voters would be horrified by that.
Kimport said Sheehys statement reveals a blatant misunderstanding of pregnancy care.
What people dont understand about third-trimester abortions is that there arent very many, but for the people who do need abortions later in pregnancy, the circumstances are often desperate and intense, she said. And these are the people who are being maligned in these political conversations.
Our Ruling
Sheehys description of Testers extreme position that would allow abortion up until the moment of birth simply doesnt hold up.
These statements are rooted in Testers support for the Womens Health Protection Act. That bill, however, doesnt open the door to abortion on demand later in pregnancy. Instead, it allows for the role of medical judgment. In addition, CDC data indicates that late-term pregnancies are rare. Also, the term elective abortion is a political rather than medical phrasing.
We rate this claim False. sources:NBC Montana, WATCH: Incumbent U.S. Senator Tester debates challenger Tim Sheehy, July 9, 2024
X social platform, post by @SheehyforMT, June 9, 2024
Tim Sheehys U.S. Senate campaign website, accessed June 9, 2024
Email interview with Katie Martin, Tim Sheehy’s spokesperson, June 11, 2024
Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, SBA Pro-Life Americas Candidate Fund Endorses Tim Sheehy for U.S. Senate, Jan. 30, 2024
Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America, in a statement,June 26, 2024
Email interview with Alina Salganicoff, KFF senior vice president and director of the nonprofits Womens Health Policy Program, June 12, 2024
Phone interview with Katrina Kimport, University of California-San Francisco professor, June 12, 2024
Phone interview with Mary Ziegler, University of California-San Diego professor, June 12, 2024
Email interview with Rachel Kingery, American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists spokesperson, June 12, 2024
KFF, Status of Abortion-Related State Constitutional Amendment Measures for the 2024 Election, updated June 28, 2024
KFF, Abortions Later in Pregnancy in a Post-Dobbs Era, Feb. 21, 2024
Julie Rovner, KFF Health News, Abortion Until the Day of Birth Is Almost Never a Thing, Nov. 15, 2023
American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, ACOG Guide to Language and Abortion, accessed June 11, 2024
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American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Facts Are Important: Gestational Development and Capacity for Pain, accessed June 11, 2024
Charlotte Lozier Institute, Fact Sheet: Abortions at 15 Weeks in the United States, updated Jan. 12, 2023
PolitiFact, Ron DeSantis False Claim That Some States Allow Post-Birth Abortions. None Do, July 21, 2023
Womens Health Protection Act of 2021, accessed June 11, 2024
Womens Health Protection Act of 2022, accessed June 11, 2024
Womens Health Protection Act of 2023, accessed July 2, 2024
Born-Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002, accessed June 11, 2024
Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Act of 2022, accessed June 11, 2024
Montana Free Press, How Montanas LR-131 Born Alive Referendum Failed, Nov. 15, 2022
Ballotpedia, History of Abortion Ballot Measures, accessed June 13, 2024
Matt Volz: [email protected], @mattvolz Related Topics Elections States Abortion KFF Health News & PolitiFact HealthCheck Misinformation Montana Women's Health Contact Us Submit a Story Tip