Legislators Consider the Underage Abortion Bill

At a hearing before the MA Committee on Public Health on Tuesday, legislators heard testimony on Senate Bill 754, which would lower the age for young women in the Commonwealth to receive an abortion without parental consent from 18 to 16. The legislation would also eliminate the waiting period between when a woman gives written consent and when the abortion is performed.  For girls aged 15 and younger, this bill would lower the threshold for obtaining an abortion by only requiring the consent of one parent instead of both.  Young girls can still bypass any parental involvement by getting a judge’s written permission.

Proponents, including the sponsor of the bill, argued that this was about a young woman’s “choice” to receive an abortion. A panel of supporters tried to convince legislators that abortion rates wouldn’t go up because of this bill, even trying to claim current Massachusetts law punishes girls who find themselves unexpectedly pregnant. But as Representative Jim Lyons (R – Andover) pointed out when questioning the bill’s sponsor, Senator Michael Barrett (D – Lexington), this bill is really trying to make it easier for children, yes children, to terminate a pregnancy without any input from their parents. One supporter admitted to the committee that her group’s ultimate goal is to have on-demand abortion readily available to anyone in the state, with few if any restrictions.

In my testimony against the bill, I reminded legislators of the number of other activities minors are prohibited from engaging in without parental consent, including receiving a tattoo, getting a piercing, or even receiving non-prescription medication, i.e. Tylenol or Advil, for a headache at school.  Shouldn’t abortion, which involves the taking of an unborn life and can produce an incredible amount of emotional trauma on the part of the mother, be held to a higher standard? I also asked legislators how low they were comfortable lowering the age of consent for abortion.  If 16, why not age 14, or lower? Finally, I reminded the committee that this bill has been submitted many times before and time and time again such an attempt to push the abortion industry’s agenda on Massachusetts’ youth has been rejected.  Let us pray it receives the same fate this session, and please email or call your legislators to tell them so!

UPDATE: We just learned yesterday that another pro-abortion bill, the Sex Ed Bill has come up for a vote in the Senate Thursday, July 20. Both of these bills are part of Planned Parenthood’s twisted concept of “comprehensive sexual health.” Let your legislators know you want them to vote NO on the Sex Ed Bill.

Chris Lloyd
Policy Analyst

Share:

More Posts

The Truth About Trans

“Gender-affirming care” has been in the headlines over the last couple of months, and if you share our concern about chemically and surgically altering the bodies of vulnerable minors in the name of gender ideology, that’s good news. It’s good news because these stories highlight what many of us have

Leominster Christian Teacher Challenges Secret Trans Policy

How would you feel if you found out that the people who you had trusted to educate and support your child had been secretly providing them with a risky mental health intervention and had been actively seeking to hide that fact from you, the parent? How would you feel if

Crisis in the Classroom: Escalating Violence and Indoctrination in MA Public Schools

MA public schools are becoming increasingly unsafe for students. Instances of violence, alongside the troubling trends of sexualization and indoctrination of children, raise profound concerns regarding the health and safety of youth attending government schools in the Commonwealth. According to the Student Discipline Data Report on the MA Department of Elementary and