From what I can tell it's another third-term abortion bill that allows abortion up to the moment the baby is born, similar to New York. When asked if Northam supported the bill, he says:
Appearing to discuss what would happen if a child was born after a failed attempt at abortion, he said, “the infant would be resuscitated if that’s what the mother and the family desired, and then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother.”
Anyway, being involved in various generally-conservative circles, the rage I hear seems related to a few repeating points:
1) An actual, medically necessary third-trimester abortion is ridiculously rare. Situations that DO require it already do not carry penalty under law. If this is the case, there is no reason to expand upon it aside from wanting to perform these abortions outside of medically necessary cases.
2) The VA bill can be interpreted as defining a baby with defects as protected only if the mother wants the baby, whether it is born or no. This seems to have been borne out by Northam's ham-handed comments. It is also in direct opposition to previous longstanding pro-choice assurances that such a thing could never be possible and that abortion would never progress to terminating a born infant.
3) I believe it's the VA bill that (correct me if I'm wrong) removes the requirement that abortion must be performed at a hospital. I have no idea what could motivate this, it's major surgery, where else would you want this done?
That said, I've seen a lot of similar sentiments by non-conservatives on this subject.
I can't say I'm in favor of these abortion bills, personally. I feel like we do need to enshrine protections firmly into law that an abortion should be an option in specific medically-necessary cases, but I don't see the benefit in relaxing these standards to this degree. I'm actually worried that the backlash could reverse views on abortion that should be reversed. What do you guys think?