| LITTLE ROCK,    Ark (Reuters) - The nation's most restrictive abortion    law is set to take effect in Arkansas    later this year, after the state's House of    Representatives on Wednesday overrode Governor    Mike Beebe's veto of legislation mostly banning the procedure after 12 weeks of pregnancy. The Republican-controlled    House voted 56-33 to override the veto by Democrat    Beebe, which followed the state Senate's override on Tuesday. In    Arkansas, lawmakers can override a veto with a simple majority vote. The law, the Arkansas    Human Heartbeat Protection Act, will go into effect 90 days after the formal    adjournment of the legislative session, scheduled for May 17. Arkansas will have the    earliest abortion ban in the country, according    to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group    that supports abortion rights. The measure prohibits    most abortions at about 12 weeks of pregnancy, once a fetal heartbeat can be    detected by a standard ultrasound. It includes exemptions for rape, incest,    danger to the life of the mother and major fetal conditions. Doctors who    violate the prohibition would have their licenses revoked by the state    medical board. Battles over abortion in    the United States have largely shifted from the federal courts to    statehouses. States in 2011 passed a    record-breaking number of new abortion    restrictions, 92, and in 2012 passed the second-highest number, 43, according    to Guttmacher. This year, for example,    the Indiana Senate passed a bill that would make the state the ninth to    require an ultrasound prior to an abortion. In Arkansas, the fetal    heartbeat bill was one of one of several bills introduced by Republicans this    year seeking to restrict abortion. This is the first time the party has    controlled both chambers since the Reconstruction era following the Civil    War. Beebe said in his veto    letter the heartbeat bill "blatantly contradicts" the U.S.    Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme Court, and he questioned the    potential cost to taxpayers of defending it against legal challenges. The ACLU of Arkansas was    expected to challenge the 12-week ban in court. (Reporting by Suzi    Parker; Editing by Corrie MacLaggan, Gary Hill, Leslie Adler and Steve    Orlofky) | 
