Vicki Ringer, the director of public affairs for Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, said that after Tuesday's vote, her organisation would file a request for a temporary restraining order once Governor McMaster signs the bill.
The bill was passed after the South Carolina House backed off a proposal to ban abortion almost entirely at conception. It also came after three Republican women urged other leaders of their party to adopt a 12-week abortion ban as they fought additional restrictions one month after helping filibuster a near-total ban.
Six-week proposal not enough time: Three Republican women
The "sister senators"- three Republicans, one Democrat, and an independent leader, who are the only women in the chamber, entered the State House Tuesday to rousing cheers from abortion rights supporters gathered on the main floor. The three Republicans said the six-week proposal did not give women enough time to make a decision.
They also criticised changes like one requiring child support beginning at conception as ridiculous. Republican Senator Katrina Shealy endorsed a 12-week ban as a “real compromise.”
Shealy and Republican Senator Penry Gustafson pushed back on assertions that they (the three Republicans) are not true Christians because of their positions.
“We in the South Carolina Legislature are not God. We do not know what’s going on in somebody else’s life. We do not have the right to make decisions for someone else,” Shealy said.
Meanwhile, the Senate's 15 Democrats, unified against both abortion bans, largely let the Republican majority debate the issue among themselves.
Currently, abortion remains legal through 22 weeks in South Carolina, though other regulations largely block access after the first trimester at the state’s three clinics.