A Nebraska bill combining a ban on most abortions after 12 weeks and restrictions on gender-affirming care for transgender Nebraskans under 19 is poised to become law after the state's unicameral legislature voted for its passage Friday.
Nebraska's LB 574, also known as the "Let Them Grow Act" was first introduced to bar health care providers from performing gender transition surgeries and to restrict access to puberty blocking medication and hormone treatments for anyone under 19. It will also severely restrict most abortions at 12 weeks after legislators added a last-minute amendment to the bill on May 17.
"Our kids are our future, and the advancement of LB574 is an important step in protecting that future. I applaud the senators who voted for LB574 and stood up for our commonsense, conservative values," Republican Gov. Jim Pillen said in statement after the amendment's passage. "I am proud to have partnered with conservative senators in this fight and look forward to signing the bill upon final passage."
The legislature passed the new abortion restrictions on the back of the gender-affirming care restrictions bill in a 33-15 vote, just meeting the threshold needed for its passage.
The bill makes it illegal for medical personnel to perform an abortion after 12 weeks of pregnancy — with exceptions for sexual assault, incest and medical emergencies. The bill does not define "medical emergency."
The bill also bans a range of treatments that fall under the umbrella of gender affirming care. Some of what it bans, like various gender affirming surgeries, are already extremely rare for minors. Others, like puberty blockers and other hormone treatments, are the standard of care for many trans and nonbinary youth. The bill leaves the governor-appointed chief medical officer with the authority to make rules on access to puberty blocking medication and hormone treatments for Nebraskans under 19.
Some Republicans have expressed concern over long-term outcomes of the treatments. But major medical associations say that gender-affirming care is clinically appropriate for children and adults with gender dysphoria --the psychological distress that may result when a person's gender identity and sex assigned at birth do not align, according to the American Psychiatric Association.
"Rather than respecting that health care decisions belong to Nebraskans and their medical providers, senators are spending these last few weeks of session trying to impose their personal beliefs on everyone else," American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska Interim Executive Director Mindy Rush Chipman said in a statement ahead of the passage. "They are disregarding what constituents want, ignoring medical experts and jeopardizing Nebraskans' health."
State Sen. Ben Hansen introduced his "Preborn Child Protection Act" amendment earlier this month on the heels of the failed LB626, or "The Heartbeat Act," which would have banned most abortions after six weeks. That bill failed to overcome a filibuster in the legislature.
Hansen said the amended bill was born out of compromises to overcome the filibuster, with a two-thirds vote needed to break that obstacle in Nebraska's legislature — which consists of a single lawmaking chamber as opposed to the typical House and Senate chambers.
He also said adding the restrictions onto the already existing bill was Republicans' last shot at passing abortion restrictions in the Cornhusker State, which have been sought by Pillen since the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
"We didn't shove things down people's throats like we could have, I think we paused and listened like we should have," Hansen said, which he said got the Republicans to the 33 votes they needed.
"These are some of the socially and culturally hottest topics that are tough to deal with," he added. "Some people don't deal with them. We are."
Opponents of the bill don't see the amendment as a compromise at all, with state Sen. Megan Hunt calling the Republicans' tacking on of the abortion restrictions in a statement "unprecedented procedural maneuvers that eroded the respect for our institution."
She asked that her Republican colleagues earn back that respect by "heeding the voices of the hundreds of thousands of Nebraskans who are pleading with them to stop this discriminatory and hateful attack on our most inherent rights."
Under the state's constitution, legislation proposed in Nebraska is required to be limited to a single topic, though the bill's advocates say both issues addressed in its language are medical procedures.