US | Virginia Virginia House Delays Abortion Bill After Protest Ultrasound would be required for women seeking abortion By Neal Colgrass Posted Feb 20, 2012 4:19 PM CST Copied Del. Robert Marshall holds a paper as he talks about his Personhood bill as Del. David Ramadan listens during the House session at the Capitol in Richmond, Va., Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Steve Helber) The Virginia House of Delegates delayed a hotly contested anti-abortion bill today after hundreds of women protested silently outside, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports. The bill—which was about to pass—would mandate an ultrasound for every woman planning an abortion and give her the choice of viewing the fetus. But an ultrasound so early in pregnancy would be trans-vaginal, forcing women to “submit to involuntary vaginal penetration," said Del. L. Kaye Kory in a scathing floor speech. Debate off the floor has been just as heated. On Twitter, a professor accused "pro-regulation" liberals of hypocrisy in opposing the bill. On the liberal side, Dana Loesch argued in Slate that the law effectively denies women who aren't virgins the right to control what penetrates their vagina. On the comic side, Amy Poehler ripped the issue during "Really?!" on SNL this weekend. The Virginia House also delayed a bill today that would let private adoption agencies deny placement to certain parents—which opponents say is targeted at same-sex couples. Read These Next For these factory workers, an unexpected windfall. A request to turn off football game ends in a murder-suicide. JonBenet Ramsey's dad hasn't given up hope in case just yet. Edited version of It's a Wonderful Life has viewers perplexed. Report an error