Current:Home > reviewsFor a Louisiana lawmaker, exempting incest and rape from the state’s abortion ban is personal -Keystone Capital Education
For a Louisiana lawmaker, exempting incest and rape from the state’s abortion ban is personal
View
Date:2025-04-14 17:19:25
For Louisiana Rep. Delisha Boyd, the uphill battle she faces to exempt pregnancies that are the result of rape and incest from Louisiana’s strict abortion ban is not just morally right — it’s also personal.
With a GOP-dominated legislative committee set to debate and vote on Boyd’s exemption bill Tuesday, the Democratic New Orleans lawmaker has decided to publicly share her own story to underscore the importance of letting rape and incest survivors decide their own fates. If the bill advances, it will still have to make it through both Republican-led chambers of the Legislature.
Boyd says her mother, the victim of statutory rape by a man nearly twice her age, was only 15 when Boyd was conceived. Boyd was born in 1969, four years before abortion became legal under the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade ruling.
More than five decades later, rape and incest survivors in Louisiana who become pregnant find themselves in a similar situation: forced to carry the baby to term in a state that has one of the country’s highest maternal mortality rates, or to travel to another state where abortion is still legal.
Supporters of Louisiana’s ban note that if Boyd’s mother had been given the choice to abort, the lawmaker might not exist.
“Aren’t you glad to be here?” GOP state Rep. Tony Bacala asked her, according to a report in The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate.
Boyd says it’s not that she regrets having been born; she just thinks her mother died before her time because of it. Boyd said her mother turned to drugs — something that Boyd attributes in large part to the trauma of giving birth and then raising a child as a teen — and as a result, died before she was 30.
“It was a life for a life,” Boyd told The Associated Press in an interview after a brief but emotional hearing held at the Legislature last week. “You’re then telling me to consider her life less important than my life.”
Boyd added that her story is likely an “exception to the rule” — other children of teen mothers can end up in foster care or turn to drugs or crime, she said. She said just because she turned out OK, it does not give her “the right to tell you what to do in your family.”
Since authoring the bill, Boyd says, she has been told stories similar to hers: that of a Louisiana girl who was raped and gave birth at 13 years old, and a 9-year-old girl who became pregnant after being sexually assaulted.
As in multiple other Republican states, Louisiana’s abortion law went into effect in 2022 following the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade, ending a half-century of the nationwide right to abortion. The only exceptions to the ban are if there is substantial risk of death or impairment to the mother if she continues the pregnancy or in the case of “medically futile” pregnancies — when the fetus has a fatal abnormality.
In 2021, there were 7,444 reported abortions in Louisiana, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Of those, 27 were obtained by people younger than 15. Nationwide, 1,338 pregnant patients under 15 received abortions, according to the CDC.
A study released by the Journal of the American Medical Association found that between July 2022 and January 2024, there were more than 64,000 pregnancies resulting from rape in states where abortion has been banned in all or most cases.
The legislative committee will review Boyd’s bill on Tuesday. A nearly identical measure effectively died in the same committee last year. Committee members delayed the hearing they began last week to give Boyd time to make adjustments.
Boyd said she plans to amend her proposal so that rape and incest exceptions would only apply to those 17 and younger. She’s hoping the change will help the measure advance to a debate before the full House.
Of the 14 states with abortion bans at all stages of pregnancy, six have exceptions in cases of rape and five have exceptions for incest. But Boyd faces an uphill battle in Louisiana, a reliably red state firmly ensconced in the Bible Belt, where even some Democrats oppose abortions.
She is hoping that sharing her mother’s story will bring to light the realities that pregnant rape and incest survivors face — and, even possibly, change the minds of some opposing lawmakers.
“No one took care of her, no one thought to even consider what was going on with her emotionally, psychologically, probably even spiritually. … I was just conceived and left for her to raise,” Boyd said.
veryGood! (858)
Related
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Dwindling Arctic Sea Ice May Affect Tropical Weather Patterns
- An eating disorders chatbot offered dieting advice, raising fears about AI in health
- Coastal biomedical labs are bleeding more horseshoe crabs with little accountability
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- With Tactics Honed on Climate Change, Ken Cuccinelli Attracts New Controversy at Homeland Security
- Afghan evacuee child with terminal illness dies while in federal U.S. custody
- Fish make music! It could be the key to healing degraded coral reefs
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- For many, a 'natural death' may be preferable to enduring CPR
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Biden taps Mandy Cohen — former North Carolina health secretary — to lead CDC
- New Study Projects Severe Water Shortages in the Colorado River Basin
- Book bans are on the rise. Biden is naming a point person to address that
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Remembering David Gilkey: His NPR buddies share stories about their favorite pictures
- Bill Allowing Oil Exports Gives Bigger Lift to Renewables and the Climate
- For many, a 'natural death' may be preferable to enduring CPR
Recommendation
Small twin
Supreme Court rules against Navajo Nation in legal fight over water rights
Caught Off Guard: The Southeast Struggles with Climate Change
India's population passes 1.4 billion — and that's not a bad thing
Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
Biden’s Early Climate Focus and Hard Years in Congress Forged His $2 Trillion Clean Energy Plan
Jack Hanna's family opens up about his Alzheimer's diagnosis, saying he doesn't know most of his family
The drug fueling another wave of overdose deaths