June 16, 2023

Texas Governor Signs Changes to "10-Day Rule"

On June 14, Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed legislation to reform Texas's controversial "10-Day Rule" allowing hospital committees (often called "death panels" by outsiders) to withdraw life-sustaining treatment from patients.

Before the new changes, Texas law allowed hospitals to withdraw treatment for any reason, including a perceived low "quality of life." After providing ten days notice to family members, the hospital can remove life-sustaining treatment such as ventilators. Family members can use that time to try and find another hospital willing to provide treatment, but they must do so in a high-pressure situation with a short deadline.

The law made national news in recent years when the mother of Tinslee Lewis filed a lawsuit to protect her daughter from denial of treatment by Cook's Children's Hospital. Tinslee was born premature with a condition that caused her heart to press against her lungs. On April 7, 2022, after over 800 days of fighting the hospital in court, Tinslee was healthy enough to go home.

The new legislation takes steps to improve Texas's countdown law, but it leaves many aspects in place. It extends the countdown from ten days to 25 days, prohibits hospitals from withdrawing treatment based on a patient's "quality of life," prohibits hospitals from imposing countdowns on competent patients, and requires hospitals to perform procedures necessary to facilitate a patient transfer before imposing a countdown.

Texas Right to Life argues that patients will still be in danger until legislators eliminate the countdown law altogether, improve laws to protect disabled patients from discrimination, and guarantee impartial review by a judge.

The "25-Day Rule" is set to take effect on September 1, 2023.

June 15, 2023

American Medical Association Rejects Resolution to Protect Babies who Survive Abortion

This week in Chicago, delegates at an annual meeting of the American Medical Association voted down a resolution for the AMA to “advocate for availability of the highest standard of neonatal care to [an] aborted fetus born alive at a gestational age of viability.”

Self-described "pro-choice" Dr. Thomas Eppes introduced the resolution. "This position is not to argue the woman's right to choose ... The decision to abort is still between the patient and the physician," Eppes said. "It does not imply the woman's responsibility for the fetal life, but this resolution places the burden of care on the physician, who now has to care for two patients once the fetus is viable."

“Eppes was the only person who spoke in favor of the resolution, which was voted down 476 to 106,” MedPage reported.

"Our policy should be based on science, it should be based on fact, and it should be based on the best available evidence that honors and upholds the value of the patient-physician relationship and the nuance and complexity of medical care," responded Kavita Rora, MD. She spoke on behalf of the pro-abortion American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. "It is not a one-size-fits-all approach and should not be based on misinformation or disinformation. I strongly urge you to oppose."

Arora was the only speaker who spoke in opposition to the resolution. She did not offer an explanation as to what parts of Eppes's argument were based on "misinformation or disinformation."

June 14, 2023

Fifth Circuit Judge Frustrated at FDA's Delay in Presenting Mifepristone Research Documents

During oral arguments last week in Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. Food and Drug Administration, Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Jennifer Walker Elrod expressed annoyance at the federal government's failure to produce documents regarding the FDA's approval of the abortion pill mifepristone.

The case concerns an over-20-year-old complaint from doctors arguing that President Bill Clinton's administration unlawfully fast-tracked the approval of mifepristone with a process intended to approve treatments for life-threatening illnesses. The FDA was required to respond to the complaint within 180 days, but the process has dragged on for decades. As the FDA still fails to provide relevant documents concerning its approval of mifepristone, many pro-lifers argue that it is still stonewalling this process.

Judge Elrod questioned Deputy Assistant Attorney General Sarah Harrington, legal counsel for the FDA, about when it could produce the necessary documents.

“So how soon can we get the record?” Judge asked Harrington, saying it “seems like something we would want to know about.”

“I can go back and talk to my clients. I don’t think it's going to be imminent,” Harrington responded.

Judge Elrod then asked in an annoyed tone, “Can you produce it in stages if you can’t produce it all at once? Is it a secret? I mean it’s the record, right?”

“It’s not a secret, it’s like in cold storage somewhere,” the Harrington said.

“But – I mean you’ve probably have brought it out of storage by now because you have a big national case on it,” Judge Elrod said.

“I know it’s frustrating,” Harrington said, “I don’t have anything more specific to tell you,” Harrington said.

June 13, 2023

Abortionists File Lawsuit Challenging Kansas "Woman's Right to Know" Act

A group of Kansas abortion businesses filed a lawsuit challenging Kansas's new law requiring informed consent for women considering abortions.

Kansas's "Woman's Right to Know" Act requires abortion businesses to provide the following information to abortion-minded women:
  • she can change her mind and withdraw consent to the abortion
  • whether the abortion business has received any disciplinary action by the state medical board
  • she has a 24-hour period think before going through with the abortion
  • a complete list of medical risks and potential complications
  • she has a right to view her ultrasound and/or hear the child's heartbeat at no additional expense
  • the child's gestational age
  • Abortion pill reversal (APR) can be used to reverse the effects of the abortion pill mifepristone if taken soon enough. This method can save the child's life if the mother changes her mind after taking mifepristone.

June 12, 2023

District Judge Hears Pro-Abortion Arguments Against Abortion Pill Regulations

On June 8, US District Judge Robert S. Ballou heard arguments from abortion businesses asking him to suspend FDA regulations governing the use of the abortion pill mifepristone.

Attorneys representing abortion clinics in Kansas, Montana, and Virginia asked Ballou to force the FDA to drop Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) regulations that have placed limitations on mifepristone since it was approved 23 years ago. While the lawsuit proceeds, the abortion businesses asked the court to place an injunction against the FDA to prevent further restrictions.

This is a stark contrast to a separate lawsuit that was recently sent back to the 5th Circuit by the US Supreme Court. In Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration, pro-life plaintiffs argued that the FDA unlawfully fast-tracked the approval of mifepristone through a process intended for drugs treating life-threatening illnesses. The FDA has stonewalled official complaints challenging the approval process for over 20 years.

In a third case, District Judge Thomas Rice issued an injunction preventing the FDA from "altering" the availability of mifepristone in 17 pro-abortion states.

Conflicting decisions could result in a need for the Supreme Court to make a ruling.

June 9, 2023

Sidewalk Counselor Sues to Challenge Colorado Buffer Zone Law

On June 1, Wendy Faustin filed a lawsuit against Colorado and the cities of Denver and Englewood over laws and ordinances that limit pro-life speech by creating "buffer zones" around abortion businesses.

Faustin's lawsuit argues that buffer zone laws violate her First Amendment rights. She desires to have "close, personal conversations" with women who enter and leave abortion businesses, but Colorado law and city ordinances prevent her from doing this.

Roger Byron of the First Liberty Institute represents Faustin in her lawsuit. In a statement to the press, Byron said, “The government may not target life-affirming speech simply because it disagrees with the message. That is unlawful viewpoint discrimination. It should not be a crime to lovingly and compassionately approach another person to tell them about alternatives to abortion.”

Colorado's buffer zone law prevents individuals from approaching within eight feet of patients near a healthcare facility without consent “for the purpose of passing a leaflet or handbill, to displaying a sign to, or engaging in oral protest, education, or counseling with such other person in the public way or sidewalk area.”

“Distributing leaflets discussing abortion, its risks and implications, and its alternatives is core expression protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment,” the complaint states. “Orally discussing abortion, its risks and implications, and its alternatives with persons entering an abortion clinic is core expression protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.”

The 1993 law was upheld by the US Supreme Court 23 years ago, but Faustin hopes the overturn of Roe v. Wade will also help her overturn Colorado's buffer zone law.

June 8, 2023

Flossmoor Planned Parenthood Causes Woman to Suffer Life-Threatening Hemorrhage

On May 23, a woman in her mid-thirties suffered from a life-threatening hemorrhage caused by an abortion at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Flossmoor, Illinois.

Pro-life advocates outside the clinic witnessed an ambulance arrive to take the patient to the emergency room. The Pro-Life Action League obtained a recording of the 911 call via FOIA request and provided it to Operation Rescue, an organization committed to documenting medical emergencies caused by abortion clinics.


The Planned Parenthood staffer who called 911 told the dispatcher that the hemorrhaging woman was sedated. The abortionist was attempting to mitigate the bleeding by inserting a catheter, adding sutures, and administering the drug Methergine.

Operation Rescue wrote, "These clues suggest the abortionist had lacerated or perforated the woman's uterus, and possibly other internal organs."

Available 911 records do not indicate whether the patient survived.

“We hope and pray this woman survived this horrific ordeal,” said Operation Rescue President Troy Newman. “It is all so senseless. A baby didn’t have to die that day, and this woman did not have to be maimed or possibly killed.”

Planned Parenthood in Flossmoor commits abortions up to 22 weeks gestation.

June 7, 2023

Indiana Abortionist Disciplined for Disclosing 10-Year-Old's Abortion to Media

Indiana Abortionist Caitlin Bernard
photo from Indiana University School of Medicine
Indiana abortionist Caitlin Bernard has been disciplined by the state's Medical Licensing Board for violating the privacy of a 10-year-old rape survivor.

Bernard made the news last year for talking to the Indianapolis Star about the child's abortion. She did so to make a political argument against the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Records in the legal case brought by Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita indicate Bernard went to the media before she reported the rape to state authorities.

On May 25, Indiana's Medical Licensing Board ruled that Bernard did not violate laws regarding the reporting of abuse, but she did violate the 10-year-old's privacy. Bernard has been formally reprimanded and faces a fine of $3,000. She was allowed to retain her medical license.

During the hearing, Bernard responded to a question asking why she felt it necessary to tell the media about her patient's rape and abortion. She responded,

“I think that it’s incredibly important for people to understand the real-world impacts of the laws of this country about abortion. I think it’s important for people to know what patients will have to go through because of legislation that is being passed, and a hypothetical does not make that impact.”

Rokita issued a statement praising the board's decision:
"Like we have said for a year, this case was about patient privacy and the trust between the doctor and patient that was broken. What if it was your child or your parent or your sibling who was going through a sensitive medical crisis, and the doctor, who you thought was on your side, ran to the press for political reasons? It’s not right, and the facts we presented today made that clear. We appreciate the Medical Licensing Board’s extraordinary time and consideration. My team did a great job getting the Truth out. Caitlin Bernard was found liable for violating state and federal patient privacy law on three separate counts."

Click here to read more. 

June 6, 2023

Students Sue Michigan Professor Who Exploited Students for $60K in Pro-Abortion Funding

Michigan State University (MSU) students filed a lawsuit against a professor who required students to subscribe to an organization that gives its revenue to Planned Parenthood.

Former MSU professor Amy Wisner required roughly 600 students to sign up for "The Rebellion Community," which her syllabus described as "a global social learning community." The membership cost $99.

Students later learned that Wisner personally operated the organization, and she would donate proceeds to Planned Parenthood or use them to fund “an RV road trip around the United States to co-create communities of rebels.”

When students complained, MSU fired Wisner and offered students roughly $60,000 from the College of Business to refund them for any money they paid to "The Rebellion Community." The lawsuit brought by students argues that Wisner should personally pay back the money.

Nathan Barbieri and Nolan Radomski filed the lawsuit against Wisner and two other college faculty members over the incident. Both students took a required business communication course taught by Wisner. They are being represented by Alliance Defending Freedom.

“I shouldn’t have to pay for my professor’s political activism,” Rodomski told Fox News. “This is a matter of free speech and I hope that the university changes its policy so that other students never have to pay expensive fees toward causes they don’t believe in.”

The suit also asks MSU “to instruct all faculty that their discretion to select course materials does not include authority to require students to pay membership fees to outside organizations or to financially support any private expression.”

June 5, 2023

Ohio Supreme Court Rules Pro-Abortion Ballot Initiative Can Move Forward

The Ohio Supreme Court ruled 7-0 that a proposed pro-abortion amendment to the state's constitution can move forward as a single initiative.

The proposed amendment would create constitutional rights to contraception, fertility treatment, continuing one's own pregnancy, miscarriage care, and abortion. Pro-lifers with Cincinnati Right to Life argued before Ohio's Supreme Court that the amendment violated the "single-issue" limit created by the state constitution. The pro-lifers hoped to separate it into two or more proposals appearing on the ballot separately.

If approved by Ohio voters, the amendment would create a right to abortion up until the moment of birth.

Ohio's Supreme Court wrote in its decision that the five rights listed in the proposal meet the single-issue standard "because each provision relates to the single general purpose of protecting a person's reproductive rights."

“It’s disappointing that the court did not believe it was two issues; however, we knew that we had a tall order to overcome with this case,” said Ohio Right to Life President Mike Gonidakis. “The court ruling does not change our tactics and strategies, and we know we will be successful in November.”

“...We are very confident in our approach and our tactics to get a majority vote from Ohioans who want to see our constitution safeguarded from out-of-state groups.”

June 2, 2023

Pro-Lifers Viciously Beaten Outside Baltimore Planned Parenthood

Baltimore pro-lifer Mark Crosby
photo by John Roswell
On May 26, two pro-life men praying outside a Planned Parenthood facility in Baltimore, Maryland were viciously beaten by an unidentified attacker.

Dick Schafer and Mark Crosby were seriously injured in the attack. Crosby was hospitalized with a fractured bone in his face.

Local pro-life John Roswell described the incident to LifeSiteNews. He said that the attacker first asked one of Planned Parenthood's escorts to hold his drink before lunging at Schafer “who believes his back was turned at that time to the assailant.” Roswell said that Schaeffer was slammed into the glass of the Planned Parenthood building.

“Mark, who was in the street, tried to go to Dick’s aid and was hit in the face, knocking him on the ground and the man then kicked him in the head,” Roswell added.

A client from the nearby pro-life pregnancy center, Options @328 Baltimore, screamed. A nurse from that facility quickly responded to help the injured men.

Images of Crosby after the attack show a severely swollen eye and nose. Roswell said the “plate bone in [Crosby’s] upper right cheek is completely fractured,” and he “is bleeding from some unidentified area behind his eye, and the bone eye orbit is completely shattered and will have to be replaced with metal.”

Supporters raised $41,881 in a GoFundMe campaign to help Crosby with his medical expenses.

On June 1, Baltimore police said they obtained video evidence of the attack, but no suspect had yet been identified or arrested.

June 1, 2023

Nevada Gov. Signs Law Protecting Abortion Traffickers

On May 30, Nevada joined the growing number of pro-abortion states with laws prohibiting cooperation with states investigating abortion-related crimes.

The new law signed by Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo (R) prohibits Nevada officials from cooperating with other another state if it is investigating a violation of a pro-life law in that state. The law also prohibits medical governing boards in Nevada from disciplining physicians who provide abortions.

This codifies an executive order by Lombardo's predecessor, Steve Sisolak (D). Lombardo originally said he would repeal the order if elected, but Lombardo reversed this stance later in his campaign.

Nevada's legislature is in the process of drafting legislation to enshrine the state's existing abortion rights into the state constitution. If it passes both democratically-controlled houses, it will need to be passed again in 2025 before appearing on the 2026 ballot. The governor's approval is not required.

May 31, 2023

Judge Temporarily Blocks South Carolina Heartbeat Law

South Carolina Circuit Judge Clifton Newman issued a temporary injunction blocking the enforcement of the state's new law banning the abortion of children with detectable heartbeats.

The new law prohibits abortion after a child's heartbeat is detectable, which normally occurs at six weeks. It contains exceptions for rape and incest up to 12 weeks, and any gestational age if the child is diagnosed with a fatal condition or the mother faces a medical emergency.

Newman's injunction must be reviewed by the South Carolina Supreme Court, which notably struck down a different heartbeat law in January. Since then, a pro-abortion justice retired from the court.

Gov. Henry McMaster (R) and pro-life legislators filed an emergency petition to the state supreme court requesting an expedited hearing:

“Appellants are likely to succeed on the merits,” the petition argues. “The 2023 Act resolves the issues the Court found with the 2021 Act, from removing the prior codification of the Roe trimester framework to clarifying the State’s compelling interest in the life of the unborn child to addressing the ‘informed choice’ concern.”

“Appellants will suffer irreparable harm without an injunction because the representative process is damaged every time a law adopted by the General Assembly and approved by the Governor is enjoined,” the petition further argues. “Respondents—two physicians and two facilities that perform abortions—will not: They cannot legally represent the interests of pregnant women on whom they seek to perform abortions, and they face no harm themselves from complying with state law. And a stay of the injunction pending appeal will protect the lives of countless unborn children.”

May 30, 2023

Michigan Man Who Shot Pro-Life Canvasser Sentenced to Community Service

On May 23, 75-year-old Richard Harvey was sentenced to two months in jail and 100 hours of community service for shooting Joan Jacobson, an 84-year-old pro-life advocate advocating against legislation that would enshrine a right to abortions in the state constitution.

Harvey pleaded no contest to the charges of felonious assault, careless discharge of a firearm causing injury, and reckless discharge of a firearm.

Judge Suzanne Hoseth Kreeger imposed a suspended sentence of two months. Harvey will not serve any time in jail if he abides by the conditions of his probation (which order him to have no contact with Jacobson). Harvey must also pay court costs and $347.19 in restitution.

Jacobson was canvassing door-to-door against the pro-abortion constitutional amendment, which was since passed by Michigan voters. She was arguing with Harvey's pro-abortion wife about the topic when he approached with a gun.

Harvey told the court that he believed Jacobson would hit his wife with her clipboard, so he used his gun to try and knock it out of her hands. In doing so, he shot Jacobson; narrowly missing her spine. Jacobson then drove herself to a nearby police station. From there, she was transported to the hospital.

Jacobson read a victim impact statement at Harvey's sentencing hearing.

“I’m still in disbelief that this incident happened to me,” she said. “I still wonder what was so offensive that I did or said in my brief encounter with Mrs. Harvey that made (Richard Harvey) decide I was a threat and needed to get a gun.”

“I have supported Right to Life my entire life — respecting life from the first moment of conception until natural death has fostered in me a heart that forgives and will do no harm to anyone, except of course in self-defense,” Jacobson said. “I wouldn’t harm Mrs. Harvey and I did nothing to show her I intended to harm her. I came to their home for the purpose of saving lives, not to take lives.”

Jacobson said that she forgives the Harveys, though she would appreciate an apology.

Many pro-lifers express concerns that such light sentencing will encourage further violence against pro-life advocates.

May 26, 2023

Federal Courts Rule California Can't Force Churches to Cover Abortion

Two federal courts in California ruled this month that the California Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) cannot force churches to cover abortions in their employee health insurance plans. The rulings found the mandate to violate the churches' first amendment rights, and the state will have to pay $1.4 million towards the churches' attorneys fees.

Alliance Defending Freedom filed lawsuits on behalf of several churches in 2015 and 2016 after the DMHC announced a state mandate that abortion be covered in health insurance plans. Emails discovered during the lawsuit revealed that Planned Parenthood influenced the California agency's policies under a threat that they would push their own legislative solution.

“The government can’t force a church or any other religious employer to violate their faith and conscience by participating in funding abortion,” said ADF Senior Counsel Jeremiah Galus. “For years, California officials, in collaboration with Planned Parenthood, have unconstitutionally targeted faith-based organizations. This is a significant victory for the churches we represent, the conscience rights of their members, and other religious organizations that shouldn’t be ordered by the government to violate some of their deepest faith convictions.”

“In both cases, the courts ruled that the U.S. Constitution protects the churches’ freedom to operate according to their religious beliefs, which include their belief in the sanctity of unborn lives,” ADF also noted.

Michigan Gov. Signs Law to Strip Employers of Conscience Protections

On May 17, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer signed legislation mandating that all employer-benefit plans that cover pregnancy care must also cover elective abortions. Employers must now choose between providing abortion coverage or dropping healthcare benefits.

The legislation was passed as an amendment to the Elliot Larson Civil Right Act, which provides protection from discrimination.

“This legislation was rapidly pushed by the proabortion legislature and now Governor Whitmer to promote their abortion agenda,” stated Genevieve Marnon, Legislative Director, Right to Life of Michigan. “To include an ‘action’ in the Elliot-Larsen law is a radical departure from the intent and spirit of the ELRCA, which was designed to prevent discrimination against people for immutable characteristics such as gender, race, religion etc.”

May 25, 2023

Rhode Island Gov. Signs Bill to Cover Abortion with Tax Dollars

Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee (D)
On May 18, Rhode Island Gov. Daniel McKee (D) signed legislation mandating the use of tax dollars to cover abortions for state employees and Medicaid recipients.

The "Equality in Abortion Coverage Act" overrides a previous state law, which prohibited abortion from being covered under Rhode Island's state health insurance.

“Here in Rhode Island, we will always protect a woman's right to choose and ensure equal access to these crucial health care services,” McKee said in a press release. “As Governor, I am proud to sign this bill into law and I was proud to include related funding in my budget proposal this year. Thank you to all the legislative leaders and advocates who worked tirelessly to get this legislation over the finish line.”

“The purpose of Medicaid is to expand access to health care, not to limit it,” said Lt. Governor Sabina Matos. “I'm proud that after years of work, the passage of the Equality in Abortion Coverage Act has eliminated unjust restrictions on who can afford to access to reproductive health care in Rhode Island. This victory for equity in health care was only possible due to the passionate advocacy of the citizens who made their voice heard year after year here at the State House.”

Taxpayer-funded abortion was not universally supported by "pro-choice" democratic legislators. Some legislators, like Rep Charlene Lima (D), argued that forcing pro-life taxpayers to foot the bill for abortions is "fundamentally wrong."

“It is fundamentally wrong to ask the taxpayers to pay for Medicaid abortions and abortion coverage under taxpayer-funded state insurance plans … I plan to vote no,” Lima said. “The taxpayers who have a fundamental belief against abortion are going to have to pay for it. Don’t say the taxpayers aren’t going to pay for it, we know they are.”

Click here to read more.

May 24, 2023

Granite City Abortion Clinic Hospitalizes 13-Year Old During Abortion

photo taken by a pro-life advocate
outside Hope Clinic on April 28
A newly released 911 recording reveals that on April 28, Hope Clinic for Women in Granite City, Illinois hospitalized a 13-year-old girl who just had an abortion.

Operation Rescue reported earlier this month that the clinic hospitalized patients at least four times between March and April of 2023. This April 28 emergency was the fourth of those incidents. Operation Rescue did not expect to receive any 911 records at the time because RuralMed EMS, a private ambulance service based over an hour away from Hope Clinic, provided transportation. It turns out that RuralMed EMS secured a contract with Effingham County to be dispatched through the public 911 service. This was one such instance.

During the 911 call, a staffer told the dispatcher that the girl just had a D&C abortion and was suffering from an "anterior perforation." No further information about the girl's condition is available. Granite City refused to provide redacted dispatch reports to Operation Rescue, and the 911 dispatcher didn't ask any further questions about the patient's condition before sending an ambulance.

D&C abortions are usually done during the first trimester. They involve the use of suction (often through a vacuum aspirator) to pull the preborn child from a mother's womb. This suction often violently tears the child's body apart. Potential complications include uterine perforations and infection, which can lead to infertility.


The Hope Clinic employee requested that the girl be transferred to Barnes Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri. That hospital is 20 minutes away, but there is a hospital directly across the street from Hope Clinic. Barnes is a level 1 trauma center capable of handling more serious injuries, and Hope makes this request frequently. This indicates that the average severity of injuries caused by Hope Clinic is high.

“We hope and pray that this poor girl lived through this deadly ordeal,” said Troy Newman, President of Operation Rescue. “If so, we pray for her as she begins a long journey of physical and emotional healing from the repeated forms of victimization that no child should ever have to endure.”

Nebraska Gov. Signs 12-Week Abortion Limit

Gov. Jim Pillen (R) signing LB574
On May 22, Nebraska Gov Jim Pillen (R) signed legislation prohibiting elective abortions after 12 weeks gestation. The law, which went into effect immediately, includes exceptions for rape, incest, and when the mother's life is in danger.

Nebraska's prior limit was at 20 weeks gestation.

"Today is a historic day in the State of Nebraska. It is a day where we are standing up and protecting our kids so that they can have a better and brighter future," said Governor Pillen. "LB574 is the most significant win for social conservatives in a generation, and is part of what has been a historic legislative session with senators voting for policies that protect our kids, cut taxes, grow agriculture, and defend our Nebraska values."

“The leadership shown by Governor Pillen led us to the place where we can now witness further safeguards for children in the womb,” said Sandy Danek, Executive Director of Nebraska Right to Life. 

“While this law does not go as far as any of us would have wanted, the lives it saves have an impact on Nebraska families and creates the possibility for life-affirming alternatives.” Danek referred to The Nebraska Heartbeat Act, which would have prohibited abortion after six weeks gestation. That bill was one vote short of breaking a filibuster.