New Alabama Law Will Protect IVF Providers

New Alabama Law Will Protect IVF Providers
Photo: Santi Visalli/Contributor/Archive Photos via Getty Images

The Facts

  • The Republican-majority Alabama state legislature Wednesday passed a bill — 81-12 in the House and 29-1 in the Senate — to protect providers of in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments from civil and criminal liability. Republican Gov. Kay Ivey then signed the bill into law.

  • In a statement explaining her approval of Senate Bill 159, Ivey said she was "pleased" to sign a bill that will help "couples in Alabama hoping and praying to be parents... grow their families through IVF."


The Spin

Republican narrative

This is a complex issue, but Republican lawmakers have managed to pass a bill that gives assurances to IVF providers that they won't face unfair scrutiny if things go awry, and recipients of IVF are now free to pursue the families they desire. The Supreme Court's ruling that embryos enjoy personhood can be addressed at a later date.

Democratic narrative

The protection provided by this law will play an important role in giving IVF providers confidence, and it's great that many of these providers have decided to restart the service. But the personhood issue is still on the table, and as long as embryos could be afforded the same rights as children, there'll always be a chilling effect. Lawmakers must rebuke the Supreme Court.

Nerd narrative

There's a 4% chance that elective abortion will be banned nationally in the United States before Jan. 1, 2030, according to the Metaculus prediction community.



Political split

LEFT

RIGHT

More neutral political stance articles

Sign up to our daily newsletter