Fact check: Is the NC GOP 'reintroducing' an abortion bill protecting life at conception?
A human rights attorney tweeted: "North Carolina GOP is reintroducing a bill that says life begins at conception and anyone who destroys that fertilized egg is guilty of first-degree murder." PolitiFact checks his claim.
Posted — UpdatedLiberal activists are sounding the alarm about a North Carolina bill that seeks to outlaw abortion and punish those involved in the procedure.
“North Carolina GOP is reintroducing a bill that says life begins at conception and anyone who destroys that fertilized egg is guilty of first-degree murder,” Qasim Rashid, a human rights attorney, said in a July 18 Twitter post.
Rashid is a former congressional candidate and has more than 344,000 followers on Twitter. The tweet, which has been deleted, linked to the website of Demand Justice, a progressive group advocating for the expansion of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Particularly for people concerned about abortion rights, the news is alarming. But the tweets are misleading and omit a significant fact: This proposed legislation is more than a year old and died in committee. We found no evidence that it has been reintroduced — the legislature is adjourned — nor did we find any evidence that it’s supported by Republican leaders in the legislature.
Rashid didn’t respond to messages seeking comment about the claims in his Twitter post.
About the bill
The bill seeks to define life as starting at fertilization — the earliest point in the pregnancy process — and could allow law enforcement to charge people with murder if they’re involved in an abortion. The bill also says people have the right to use deadly force to defend the life of another person, and that the state has an interest to “punish those who take the lives of persons, born or unborn, who have not committed any crime punishable by death.”
So, to some degree, the tweets convey some of the bill’s intent. However, Rashid inaccurately described who filed the bill. It wasn’t filed by the “North Carolina GOP,” and it wasn’t even supported by a majority of Republicans.
“This appears to be purely political gaslighting,” Moore said of the tweet’s claim.
With Roe v. Wade overturned and multiple states moving to limit abortion, the claim that the bill is being “re-introduced” is perhaps the most misleading part of the tweet.
The bill was filed Feb. 24, 2021. It bounced around three House committees without a vote and the most recent committee referral was that August.
The political landscape
The tweets also ignore an important fact about what would happen if the bill were somehow approved by the legislature.
H158 calls for a constitutional amendment. Proposed constitutional amendments only pass if they receive 60% of the vote in both the House and Senate. Then all proposed amendments to the North Carolina Constitution must be approved by voters through a statewide referendum. The bill would direct the state Board of Elections to place it on the ballot in this year’s November elections. And it’s not a slam dunk at the polls.
A recent WRAL poll conducted before Roe v. Wade was overturned found that most North Carolinians want state abortion laws to stay the same or become less restrictive.
Given the procedural and political obstacles, it’s virtually impossible for this bill to pass this year and become law.
After PolitiFact North Carolina contacted Voters of Tomorrow, Mayer deleted a tweet attached to the original claim that sought donations to his group.
In an email statement provided to PolitiFact through Voters of Tomorrow, Mayer said: "While this bill was introduced earlier than I realized, our focus should be on how this bill would put people at risk of being murdered by the state for exercising control over their own bodies.” Mayer also tweeted an acknowledgement that the bill “has been stuck in committee for a bit.”
Our ruling
Rashid said “North Carolina GOP is reintroducing a bill that says life begins at conception and anyone who destroys that fertilized egg is guilty of first degree murder.”
The claim captures some of the bill’s intentions, but falsely says it was “reintroduced” by the “North Carolina GOP” and ignores key details about the bill’s status and potential for becoming law.
We rate it Mostly False.
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