[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Con. Res. 130 Introduced in House (IH)]
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118th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. CON. RES. 130
Commending State and local governments for championing reproductive
rights as human rights.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
September 24, 2024
Ms. Williams of Georgia (for herself, Ms. Adams, Mr. Carter of
Louisiana, Mr. Casar, Ms. McClellan, Mr. Raskin, Mr. Doggett, Ms.
Escobar, Ms. Kamlager-Dove, Ms. Norton, Ms. Velazquez, Mr. Nickel, Mr.
McGovern, Mr. Magaziner, Ms. McCollum, Ms. Sewell, Mrs. Ramirez, Ms.
Wild, Mr. Trone, Mr. Cleaver, Ms. Tlaib, Mrs. Beatty, Ms. Schakowsky,
Ms. Lee of California, Ms. Brownley, Ms. Clarke of New York, Mr.
Krishnamoorthi, Mrs. Fletcher, Mrs. Watson Coleman, Mr. Swalwell, Mr.
Johnson of Georgia, Ms. Garcia of Texas, Ms. Pettersen, Mr. Espaillat,
Mr. Evans, Mrs. Cherfilus-McCormick, Mr. Pocan, Ms. Omar, Ms.
Strickland, Mr. Robert Garcia of California, Mr. Veasey, Ms. Ocasio-
Cortez, Mr. Vargas, Ms. Tokuda, Ms. Balint, Mr. DeSaulnier, Mr.
Grijalva, Mr. Huffman, Mr. Tonko, Ms. Salinas, Mrs. Hayes, Mr.
Gottheimer, Mrs. Torres of California, Mr. Deluzio, Mr. Soto, Ms.
Titus, Mr. Cohen, Mr. Lieu, Ms. Craig, Mr. Thompson of Mississippi, Mr.
Garcia of Illinois, Ms. DeLauro, Ms. Ross, Mrs. Peltola, Mr. Himes, Mr.
Kennedy, Mrs. Trahan, Mr. Carson, Ms. Crockett, Ms. Stevens, Mr.
Goldman of New York, Ms. Kelly of Illinois, Ms. Porter, Ms. Brown, Ms.
Jacobs, Ms. Bonamici, Mr. Allred, Ms. Castor of Florida, Ms. Dean of
Pennsylvania, Mr. Connolly, Mr. Casten, Ms. Chu, Ms. Bush, Ms. Wilson
of Florida, Ms. DelBene, Ms. Barragan, Ms. Leger Fernandez, Mr. Bowman,
Mr. Sorensen, Mr. Cardenas, Ms. Budzinski, Ms. Scanlon, Mr. Carbajal,
Mrs. Foushee, Mr. Peters, Ms. Lee of Pennsylvania, and Ms. DeGette)
submitted the following concurrent resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the Committee on
Energy and Commerce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the
Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall
within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned
_______________________________________________________________________
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
Commending State and local governments for championing reproductive
rights as human rights.
Whereas, on June 24, 2022, the United States Supreme Court in Dobbs v. Jackson
Women's Health Organization, 597 U.S. 215 (2022) overturned Roe v. Wade,
410 U.S. 113 (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992)
and eliminated the Federal constitutional right to abortion in the
United States;
Whereas, subsequently, more than a dozen States have passed legal barriers that
fully ban abortion, and many others have passed legal barriers that
severely restrict abortion;
Whereas the retrogression on abortion rights in the United States is
inconsistent with United States obligations under international human
rights law;
Whereas treaties ratified by the United States should be upheld at the Federal,
State, and local level as they are considered the ``supreme Law of the
Land'' under clause 2 of Article VI of the United States Constitution;
Whereas the United States has ratified, and is bound by, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, done on June 1, 1992, the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination, done on September 29, 1994, and the Convention against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
done on September 19, 1994;
Whereas the United States has previously joined the international community in
identifying reproductive rights as human rights, including during the
1995 Beijing World Conference on Women;
Whereas escalating restrictions on abortion access in the United States conflict
with public health guidance;
Whereas the abortion care guideline, published by the World Health Organization
in 2022, recommends the full decriminalization of abortion, the removal
of grounds-based restrictions on abortion, and the removal of
gestational age-limits on the provision of abortion care;
Whereas access to the full range of sexual and reproductive health care,
including abortion, is essential to the health and well-being of all
people;
Whereas no one should be criminalized for any pregnancy outcome;
Whereas punishing people for their pregnancy outcomes and the circumstances of
their pregnancies or for providing essential reproductive and sexual
health care violates their human rights;
Whereas the threat of criminalization or prosecution can intimidate people from
seeking or providing care;
Whereas reproductive and sexual health care providers administer high-quality,
essential health care, and play a critical role in ensuring people are
able to make decisions about their bodies and lives with dignity;
Whereas no one should be criminalized for providing essential health care;
Whereas pregnant people who have been denied abortion care suffer many adverse
consequences, including putting their health, fertility, and lives at
risk, being forced to carry nonviable pregnancies to term, and being
criminalized for miscarriage, the circumstances of their pregnancies,
abortions, and other pregnancy outcomes;
Whereas pregnant people in Texas, and other Southern States, have been forced to
undergo invasive and dangerous surgeries, such as cesarean sections,
instead of receiving routine abortion care when faced with obstetric
emergencies, putting their health and lives at risk;
Whereas this obstetric violence has long been true for communities of color and
especially Black communities, as early American gynecology treated Black
women as expendable clinical material for its institutional needs, and
this medical violence was animated by biological racism and the legal
and economic exigencies of the antebellum era;
Whereas Indigenous people, Black people, people of color, people with low
incomes, people living in rural areas, people with disabilities,
immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals, and other marginalized individuals are
disproportionately likely to be surveilled, arrested, charged,
prosecuted, convicted, and heavily punished within the United States
criminal justice system and, due to systemic discrimination, to
experience additional scrutiny from the United States legal system;
Whereas, from 2006 to 2022, almost 1,400 people were arrested in the United
States in relation to the circumstances or outcomes of their pregnancy,
including pregnancy loss, and prosecutions overwhelmingly targeted
people with low incomes, and this trend has only increased since the
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision;
Whereas the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision has further
decimated abortion access in the United States;
Whereas the United States has been reviewed by two United Nations treaty-
monitoring bodies since the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization
decision--the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination and
the Human Rights Committee;
Whereas, on August 11 and 12, 2022, the United Nations Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination reviewed the United States
implementation of the International Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Racial Discrimination and on August 30, 2022, issued
recommendations to the United States Government to address the profound
disparate impact of the Supreme Court's ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson
Women's Health Organization on women of racial and ethnic minorities,
Indigenous women and those with low incomes;
Whereas the United Nations Human Rights Committee reviewed the United States'
implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights on October 17 and 18, 2023, and issued concluding observations
and recommendations to the United States Government on November 3, 2023;
Whereas the United Nations Human Rights Committee's concluding observations
express deep concern over the criminalization of abortion seekers, those
who help them and abortion providers; restrictions on interstate travel
that inhibits access to care; bans on medication abortion; and the use
of digital data surrounding abortion for prosecution purposes;
Whereas State and local governments play an important role in ensuring that the
United States complies with its treaty obligations;
Whereas the United Nations Human Rights Committee called on and encouraged State
and local lawmakers to uphold human rights in their law making and to
take specific action to ensure that no one is criminalized for a
pregnancy outcome, nor anyone who provides abortion care or helps
someone obtain an abortion and that all people can access abortion care
when they need it;
Whereas the City of Alexandria, Virginia, enacted a resolution to expand access
to abortion on June 28, 2022, in the wake of the Dobbs decision, and the
city council held a status update meeting to address areas for
improvement on June 25, 2024, just after the two-year anniversary of
Dobbs, and will seek to proactively address unmet needs in the upcoming
City budget;
Whereas Louisiana House Bills 56, 63, 164, and 293 were introduced in February
2024, and sought to increase access to reproductive health care and
committee testimony regarding the bills illustrate the human rights
concerns and obligations that necessitated the passage of these bills;
Whereas Mount Rainier, Maryland, issued a Mayoral Proclamation declaring June
24, 2024, as ``Reproductive Rights are Human Rights Day'', a first of
its kind effort on a local level to protect reproductive freedom as a
human right;
Whereas Montgomery County, Maryland, passed a resolution to address the Dobbs
decision in 2022 and unanimously passed a resolution with unanimous
support on September 10, 2024, to increase access to abortion in the
county and to explicitly condemn the criminalization of anyone for a
pregnancy outcome or the criminalization of anyone for a circumstance
surrounding their pregnancy;
Whereas the City Council of Austin, Texas, has invested over $400,000 in support
for abortion access to help low-income people overcome the myriad
barriers they face seeking abortion care, and passed a resolution on
August 29, 2024, declaring abortion as a human right, acknowledging the
duties of the Texas government at the local and State levels to uphold
its human rights obligations under the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights, and explicitly condemning the criminalization of
anyone for a pregnancy outcome or the criminalization of anyone for a
circumstance surrounding their pregnancy;
Whereas the City Councils of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, North Carolina,
introduced and passed resolutions on September 11 and 12, 2024,
declaring reproductive rights and abortion as human rights, and
explicitly condemning the chill felt in North Carolina from neighboring
States that ban abortion and the criminalization of anyone for a
pregnancy outcome or for any circumstance surrounding their pregnancy;
Whereas Louisiana House Bills 56, 63, 164, and 293, the City of Mount Rainier
Proclamation making June 24, 2024, Reproductive Rights are Human Rights
Day, and resolutions for Austin, Texas, Montgomery County, Maryland,
Alexandria, Virginia, and Chapel Hill and Carrboro, North Carolina,
reflect State and local efforts, to address recommendations made by the
United Nations Human Rights Committee on maternal mortality, voluntary
termination of pregnancy, and sexual and reproductive rights and to
promote and protect human rights; and
Whereas Louisiana House Bills 56, 63, 164, and 293, the City of Mount Rainier
Proclamation making June 24th Reproductive Rights are Human Rights Day,
and the resolutions for Austin, Texas, Alexandria, Virginia, Montgomery
County, Maryland, and Chapel Hill and Carrboro, North Carolina, further
efforts to promote compliance with the United States' human rights
obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, in accordance with Article VI, clause 2 of the United States
Constitution: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That Congress--
(1) recognizes the important role that State and local
governments should play to ensure that the United States
complies with its treaty obligations;
(2) condemns the criminalization of abortion and the
criminalization of any circumstances or outcomes of a person's
pregnancy in the United States;
(3) affirms that all people deserve access to high-quality
health care without fear of punishment;
(4) affirms that reproductive rights are human rights;
(5) urges the governments of States that impose
restrictions harmful to pregnant people to repeal those
restrictions; and
(6) urges the government of States--
(A) to repeal State laws that criminalize abortion;
(B) to prohibit the prosecution of people for
having abortions or for any other circumstances or
outcomes of their pregnancies; and
(C) to protect and guarantee human rights.
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