The Congressional right certainly has members that would be willing to sponsor an abortion ban even if it meant career suicide within the House. Given the way districts are currently drawn, they'd still probably stay in office unless something unrelated took them out (Abramov, etc.). I'm specifically thinking of some the Members from Kansas that have the constituent support to propose the death penalty for abortion providers, let alone a ban.
The real problem is whether or not the leadership would ever let a ban out of committee or even to be discussed in committee. They aren't ready for that kind of fight given the current turmoil with the various scandals. That's not to say that they couldn't be ready to go in 6 months, but it would probably hurt a lot of incumbents in an election cycle. If they were really serious about outlawing abortion (or even restricting it), they would have gone after it at the beginning of this Congress. With the new session starting up next week, the Republicans are electing a new majority leader and worrying about reelection. February of 2006 is a terrible time for them to be taking this up and trying to pass any sort of controversial ban.
So, Samcol, no they aren't going to take it up but if they manage to keep roughly the same majority of seats in the House, its a possibility but not a certainty.
The Senate is a completely different situation, and there's virtually no chance of any sort of ban ever making it out of committee, let alone coming to a vote. It would be filibustered into extinction immediately if it somehow made it to the floor.
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