Friday on Political Rewind: A federal appeals court took up the question of Georgia's controversial abortion statute, HB 481. The law, which would effectively outlaw abortion, has yet to go into effect because of a lower court's ruling. Our panel discussed the potential consequences of restrictive abortion law.\n\nGeorgia's law is one of a number of legislation involving abortion access across the country that have become significant recently. A controversial law in Texas allows U.S. residents to sue anyone who might have helped facilitate an abortion after six weeks. And the Supreme Court will soon consider a Mississippi law drafted specifically to get the court to deliberate on the precedent set by the landmark Roe v. Wade decision.\n\nMeanwhile, Gov. Brian Kemp issued the formal call for a special session of the General Assembly to redraw Georgia's political maps. On Nov. 3, lawmakers will gather in the stateCapitol to take part in the decennial redistricting process. Notably, Kemp is not asking the legislature to address other issues, including election law or an anti-crime agenda, despite pressure to do so from conservatives in the state Republican party.\n\nPanelists:\n\nStephen Fowler \u2014 Politics reporter, Georgia Public Broadcasting\n\nDr. Subasri Narasimhan \u2014 Assistant professor, Hubert Department of Global Health and the Center for Reproductive Health Research in the Southeast at Emory University\n\nPatricia Murphy \u2014 Columnist, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution