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Politics & Government

Florida's Crist vetoes ultrasound bill, enraging abortion foes

Lee Logan and John Frank - Miami Herald/St. Petersburg Times

June 11, 2010 07:01 PM

As he positions himself to the center in the U.S. Senate race, Gov. Charlie Crist on Friday vetoed a measure requiring most women to pay for an ultrasound and hear a description of the fetus before they can have an abortion.

"This bill places an inappropriate burden on a woman seeking to terminate a pregnancy," Crist said in his veto message.

The measure would have required most women to have an ultrasound performed before having an abortion, unless the woman can prove she is a victim of rape, incest, domestic violence or human trafficking. Women could opt out of viewing the ultrasound by signing a form.

Anti-abortion advocates and Crist's Republican critics in the Legislature immediately pounced on the decision. John Stemberger, head of the Florida Family Policy Council, called the veto "profoundly disappointing" and said it's now "crystal clear that he's pro-abortion."

Crist's move marks the third veto of a high-priority bill passed by the GOP-controlled Legislature. While lawmakers were still in session and he was still a Republican, Crist vetoed a campaign finance bill that he said would reinstate legislative "slush funds." He also vetoed a controversial teacher tenure bill that earned him wide acclaim among educators.

Now, the newly independent governor is tacking to the center in his U.S. Senate bid and polls show him attracting votes from Democrats and independents.

HB 1143 began as a routine measure regulating nursing homes, but senators added the ultrasound provision in the final days of the session without public testimony in legislative committees.

The bill passed the Senate 23-16 and in the House 76-44.

The legislation also would have prohibited private healthcare insurers from covering the cost of abortions if the plan receives government subsidies. Designed to limit coverage for abortions under the new federal healthcare law, the provision would have required women with those plans to buy extra coverage or pay out-of-pocket for an abortion.

But the ultrasound requirement received the most attention of all of the bill's sections. A similar provision failed on a rare tie vote in the Senate two years ago. Supporters called the bill "the most significant pro-life measure that's ever happened in Florida's history."

Crist has long said he is personally anti-abortion but is hesitant to impose his views on others. He supports the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision as the law of the land.

Read more of this story at MiamiHerald.com

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