COLUMBIA, S.C. (Tuesday, April 25, 2023) – By a single vote of
22-21, the South Carolina Senate advanced the Human Life Protection Act (H3774) to second reading Tuesday. The crucial and final third reading is pending. Third reading is the most critical, make-or-break vote for the unborn children of
South Carolina.
Calls need to continue to the offices of the State Senators. Click here to call and e-mail your Republican State Senator with the message Vote for Cloture to end debate and Vote for H3774, the Human Life Protection Act.
“Second reading is a necessary step to protect the more than 100 unborn children dying each week in South Carolina because of abortion,” said South Carolina Citizens for Life President
Lisa Van Riper. “We applaud the 22 senators who stood for life today; however, the Senate’s commitment to life will be on third reading.”
Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey, R-Edgefield, explained the bill that protects unborn human life when a woman is diagnosed as being pregnant. There are four exceptions that allow abortion to save the mother’s live, prevent serious bodily
impairment, in cases of rape and incest, and in the case of a fatal fetal anomaly.
Citing abortion statistics from the Department of Health and Environmental Control, Senator Massey said abortions have doubled in South Carolina since the State Supreme Court overturned the 2021 Fetal Heartbeat Act while Georgia and Florida enacted laws protecting the unborn when the heartbeat can be
detected. He said South Carolina is an abortion destination state for the southeast. “South Carolina [abortion] law is the weakest in the southeast,” Massey said, emphasizing that abortions for out-of-state women have nearly doubled. North Carolina allows late abortions up to 20 weeks but there is a three-day waiting period, he said. That is a factor driving North Carolina residents to South Carolina where there is a 24-hour waiting period.
In 2022 from January to March, 87 non-resident women received abortions in South Carolina. In 2023 from January to March, 1,385 non-resident women received abortions in South Carolina. “That is a 1500 percent increase” in the number of non-resident women coming to South Carolina for abortion, Massey said.
Abortion is
legal in South Carolina up to 20 weeks after fertilization. “Most South Carolinians don’t think that is acceptable,” Massey said.
During the three hours of debate, the majority of all the senators staved off an amendment by Senator Greg Hembree, R-Horry, to make the abortion issue a referendum to be
voted on in an election. Senate President Thomas Alexander, R-Oconee, ruled that the amendment was “not germane” to the Human Life Protection Act. When militant pro-abortion Senator Sandy Senn, R-Charleston, appealed Alexander’s decision, she lost by vote of 5-39.
All 22 votes in favor of second reading for the Human Life Protection Act are Republicans. There are 30 Republicans in the SC Senate. Six Republicans join the pro-abortion Democrats in opposing the Human Life Protection Act. They are Tom Davis of Beaufort, Sandy Senn of Charleston, Katrina Shealy of Lexington, Penry Gustafson of Kershaw, Luke Rankin of
Horry, and Greg Hembree of Horry.