General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsExtreme Texas Abortion Pill Bill, Seen as National Model, Fails to Advance
Senate Bill 2880, a top priority for the states abortion opponents, would have targeted people who manufacture, distribute, mail or otherwise provide abortion medication in Texas. It would have enabled private citizens to sue people who distributed or provided abortion pills in Texas for a minimum of $100,000. Backers said the bill was meant to hit organizations such as Aid Access, an abortion telehealth provider that helps people in states with abortion bans who want to terminate their pregnancies.
But despite clearing key legislative hurdlesthe bill passed the states Republican-led Senate in April and received approval from a House committee Friday eveningSB 2880 was not scheduled for a floor vote in Texas House of Representatives. Tuesday is the deadline for Senate bills to receive a vote in the House; the bills omission means it will not make it to the governors desk before the legislative session ends this week.
SB 2880 seemed poised to pass. The bills Senate sponsor, Republican Bryan Hughes, chairs his chambers influential state affairs committee, which oversees legislation affecting state policy and government. The bill had also been reviewed and approved by staff for Gov. Greg Abbott.
Its very disappointing to see that it likely wont pass this session, said Ashley Leenerts, legislative director of Texas Right to Life, which helped craft the bill and lobbied heavily for its passage. This has been Texas Right to Lifes top priority since the session began. Were going to keep working and do our best. But it did seem like there had been support from leadership in the House, Senate and governor.
https://msmagazine.com/2025/05/27/texas-abortion-pill-law-sb-2880/

ananda
(31,862 posts)And won't let them go home till the bill passes?
He's done this before.
SARose
(1,465 posts)Bill curbing the flow of abortion pills into Texas likely dead
Snip
Conservatives blamed State Affairs Chair Ken King, a Republican from Canadian, for sitting on the bill for more than three weeks before passing it out at the last minute. More than 40 lawmakers signed onto a letter calling on King to bring the bill up for a vote.
If Chairman King kills a bill that would protect tens of thousands of innocent children from the murder that is abortion, Republicans will be forced to hold him accountable, said Rep. Nate Schatzline, a Fort Worth Republican, at a press conference on Friday.
King, a six-term Republican, is relatively moderate for the Texas House, which has become more conservative in recent sessions. While Texas Right to Life has been critical of his allegiance on certain abortion issues, even going so far as to endorse his primary opponents, other anti-abortion groups, like Texas Alliance for Life, have long supported him as an ally. King did not respond to a request for comment.
Snip
In a session busy with other conservative priorities like school vouchers, THC, bail and voting, further restricting abortion pills fell down the priority list for some lawmakers, especially as a majority of Texas voters opposed authorizing private lawsuits against someone who provides abortion pills.
Snip
More
RJ-MacReady
(579 posts)Blue states would never comply and shouldn't no matter what, including court ordered compliance. This IS the hill to die on.