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The Statehouse News Bureau provides educational, comprehensive coverage of legislation, elections, issues and other activities surrounding the Statehouse to Ohio's public radio and television stations.

With six-week ban in effect, bill to confer 'personhood' from conception introduced in Ohio

 Newly elected Rep. Gary Click (R-Vickery) offers the opening prayer for the first session of the Ohio House of the 134th General Assembly on January 4, 2021. [ Ohio House of Representatives / ohiohouse.gov]
Newly elected Rep. Gary Click (R-Vickery) offers the opening prayer for the first session of the Ohio House of the 134th General Assembly on January 4, 2021.

Less than a month after a ban on abortion after six weeks went into effect in Ohio, a new effort has been launched to revive an old idea among anti-abortion activists – fetal personhood.

House Bill 704 is three sentences long, saying what’s called the "Personhood Act" would protect the constitutional rights of unborn human individuals from conception.

"Some other people use some other artificial terms, such as viability and so on and so forth," sponsoring Rep. Gary Click (R-Vickery), a Baptist pastor, said in an interview. "And that's really been a moving target as science has advanced. But from the moment of conception, that person is a unique individual with their own DNA, and I believe they are deserving of all the rights of personhood."

Click said doesn’t include exceptions for rape or incest.

“I would love to see us go to that place where we protect that person from we respect and that we value life from the moment of conception," Click said. "So I would love to see there be no abortions with the exceptions of a time when there is a medical emergency -- I would certainly want to save the life of the mother."

The bill states: "Nothing in this section shall be interpreted in any manner that would endanger the life of a mother." But it offers no specifics on how those exceptions would be proven or needed.

The bill has seven conservative Republican co-sponsors: Jennifer Gross, Thomas Hall, Kris Jordan, Susan Manchester, Jena Powell, Craig Riedel and Reggie Stoltzfus.

Five states have similar laws, which challengers say are constitutionally vague. A law in Arizona was blocked in court on Monday.

A proposed "personhood" amendment to the Ohio Constitution was certified in 2011, but never made it the ballot. The Zanesville pastor and family practice doctor behind that movement, Patrick Johnston, moved on to writing and producing survivalist and faith-based books and films.

Copyright 2022 The Statehouse News Bureau. To see more, visit The Statehouse News Bureau.

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