Florida Suspends Bill to Protect ‘Unborn Child’ After I.V.F. Ruling

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Florida Suspends Bill to Protect ‘Unborn Child’ After I.V.F. Ruling

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Democrats warned that the proposed legislation, which would allow civil lawsuits over the death of a fetus, would affect fertility treatments.

A man in a blue tie leans in to talk to a woman in a red jacket in the Florida State House.
Erin Grall, right, a Florida Senate republican and the bill’s sponsor, said, “It is important we get the policy right with an issue of this significance.”Credit…Octavio Jones for The New York Times

David W. Chen

The News

Republican lawmakers in Florida sidelined a bill this week that would allow civil lawsuits over the wrongful death of a fetus.

Those on both sides of the abortion debate attributed the pause to fallout from the Alabama Supreme Court’s ruling that frozen embryos should be considered children.

If it moves ahead, the bill would add Florida to the ranks of about a dozen other states that allow parents to receive financial damages in some instances when a fetus has died. The bill says in cases of wrongful death, parents of an “unborn child” are considered survivors who can sue in civil court.

But in recent weeks, Democrats and others warned that the bill amounts to “fetal personhood,” assigning full rights of a person to a fetus. Such a designation, they said, would imperil doctors and anyone who assisted women in obtaining an abortion and would also adversely affect fertility treatments.

On Monday, Republican legislative leaders in Florida announced that they had postponed the bill.

“Although I have worked diligently to respond to questions and concerns, I understand there is still work that needs to be done,” Senator Erin Grall, a Republican from Vero Beach and the bill’s sponsor, said in a statement. “It is important we get the policy right with an issue of this significance.”

Why It Matters: I.V.F. ruling presents new challenges for Republicans

Last week’s ruling in Alabama created a political storm for Republicans who were already battling internal divisions and public opinion over abortion.

The Alabama ruling prompted abortion opponents like former President Donald J. Trump and several Republican governors to underscore their support for I.V.F.

Though the Florida bill does not mention I.V.F., critics feared that it could affect fertility treatments and make it harder for families to have children.

“It’s fair to assume that I.V.F. was a problem for this bill from the jump,” said Mary Ziegler, a law professor and historian at the University of California, Davis, who used to teach at Florida State University. “But the degree of backlash and concern increased significantly after the ruling. It’s kind of like it turned into a firestorm.”

Background: Fetal personhood is a goal for anti-abortion activists

With the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2022, abortion opponents have been able to devote more attention to another major goal: fetal personhood.

The Florida bill didn’t use the term “personhood.” Nor did it mention the word “doctor.” But opponents criticized the bill for being a de facto personhood bill. The bill’s sponsors said an unborn child is a “member of the species Homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb.”

On Monday, after the bill was postponed, Florida Voice for the Unborn, an anti-abortion group, praised Ms. Grall for pulling what they said was a flawed bill, because the definition should apply to “those unborn children frozen as embryos.” The group also said that it expected the bill to reintroduced, and passed, in 2025.

What Happens Next

With just two weeks left in the legislative calendar, the postponement suggested that the bill’s chances of passage were slim for this session.

Senator Lauren Book of Plantation, the Democratic minority leader, wrote on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, that “thankfully, it appears personhood will not be the law of the land in our state.”

Floridians are awaiting a ruling from the State Supreme Court on the constitutionality of the state law banning most abortions after 15 weeks. Separately, the state more recently passed a law that bans abortion after six weeks. If the court affirms the 15-week ban, the more recent six-week ban would be allowed to take effect.

Residents are also waiting to see whether they will vote on a ballot measure in November that would protect abortion rights in the state’s Constitution.

The State Supreme Court is weighing a challenge from opponents of the ballot initiative, who say that the language is too vague. But the court’s conservative justices, who have until April 1 to rule on the challenge, seem reluctant to block the ballot measure.

The ballot measure would require more than 60 percent support from voters to pass. According to a statewide poll conducted by the University of North Florida in November, 62 percent of registered voters said they favored the amendment, including 53 percent of Republicans.