On the 25th local time, Oklahoma governor Kevin stetter officially signed a new version of the abortion ban, which prohibits all abortion measures after embryo fertilization. The bill has entered into force immediately after signing, and has become the most stringent anti abortion bill in the United States The New York Times said that any abortion measures taken after fertilization would violate the provisions of the new act. The bill only allows abortion in cases of pregnancy due to rape and incest, or in other cases to protect the life and safety of pregnant women.
Governor Kevin said at the meeting: "other states want to pass more lenient (abortion) bills, which is their right, but in Oklahoma, we will always stand up for the protection of life."
In early May, several US media disclosed a heavy internal news from the US Supreme Court: among the nine life-long justices of the US Supreme Court, five believed to varying degrees that the ruling on the protection of women's right to abortion established in the United States in 1973 was "seriously wrong" and should be overturned. Since these five people have occupied a majority of the nine justices, if their opinions form a formal ruling document in the U.S. Supreme Court, the right of American women to abortion will no longer be protected by the U.S. Constitution. Governments at all levels and around the United States can legislate and decide under what circumstances women can have an abortion.
After the news, the issue of "abortion" has become an important controversial point in the United States during this period of time. People who supported and opposed strict control of abortion took to the streets to protest, and fierce conflicts broke out online and offline. Similarly, the entry into force of the Oklahoma bill soon caused heated debate in the field of public opinion in the United States. Opponents argue that the move infringes on women's reproductive rights, while conservatives insist that the bill can "protect all lives" to the greatest extent.