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Texas closes more abortion clinics – down to six remaining in the state by September

It’s really getting bad for leftists in Texas. The primary election was a disaster for Wendy Davis, a sign of things to come in November. Now, Texas is closing down more abortion clinics. By September, there are expected to be only six abortion mills left in the state of Texas. We can all thank Abortion Barbie Wendy Davis for waking Texans up to the brutality that is abortion. The abortion mills will have to take up residence in leftist states like California instead.

Texas closes more abortion clinics - down to six remaining in the state by September
Texas closes more abortion clinics – down to six remaining in the state by September

Two abortion clinics in Texas are closing, bringing the state’s total down to 20 as abortion providers struggle to stay open under new state laws.

The two clinics—located in McAllen and Beaumont—are the last remaining providers in rural areas. Those that remain are clustered in major cities, leaving low-income women in rural Texas without nearby access to abortion.

More closures are likely to follow: Under House Bill 2, an antiabortion bill passed last November, all clinics are required to close by Sept. 1, 2014, unless they have on-site ambulatory surgical centers. Of the 20 remaining clinics, only six meet that standard and are likely to remain open.

There were 44 abortion clinics in Texas in 2011.

House Bill 2—the most restrictive in a recent wave of state-level antiabortion laws—gained national attention last summer when Democratic state Sen. Wendy Davis filibustered the bill for 11 hours. It nevertheless passed the Legislature shortly after during a second special session called by Republican Gov. Rick Perry in July 2013.

Along with the surgical-center clinic requirement, the bill bans abortions after 20 weeks; bans medical abortions after seven weeks and requires women to visit the clinic four separate times to complete the procedure (one visit for a sonogram, a second and third for doses of a drug, and a fourth for a follow-up); and requires all physicians conducting the procedure to have hospital admitting privileges within a 30 mile radius.