It does not include an exception for a pregnancy caused by rape or incest.

Most of Wednesday’s somber debate centered on whether to add that exception. The effort failed, winning support from only one-third of House lawmakers.

“I am not man enough to tell a woman who has had her insides ripped apart and been raped, I’m not man enough to tell that woman, ‘You know what? Live with it,'” said Democratic Rep. Ted James.

Republican Rep. Julie Stokes, who voted for the ban, stood at the microphone shaking as she urged her colleagues to support an exception.

“I’m 100% pro-life. I’ve always been 100% pro-life. But I don’t feel equipped to make every victim’s decision,” she said.

Republican Rep. Alan Seabaugh objected to the exceptions, saying he’d support letting a woman execute her rapist, but “we don’t punish children in this country for the sins of the father.”

Under the bill, a doctor who violates the prohibition could face a prison sentence of up to two years, along with medical license revocation.

Although similar abortion bans have drawn sharp criticism from Democrats nationwide, Louisiana’s proposal won wide bipartisan support and was sponsored by a Democrat from the northwest corner of the state, Sen. John Milkovich.

Support from Edwards, running for reelection this fall against two Republicans, is expected to help shore up his position with some voters in his conservative home state, even if it puts him at odds with national Democratic Party leaders and donors.

The ban is one of several bills that Louisiana lawmakers are advancing to add new restrictions on abortion, including a proposal steps from passage to ask voters to rewrite the state constitution to ensure it offers no protections for the procedure. Another bill nearing the governor’s desk would limit where medication-induced abortions can be performed to the state’s three licensed abortion clinics.