
Abortion rights advocates filled the rotunda of the Texas state capitor as the senate prepared to vote.
Texas politicians have given final approval to one of the US's toughest anti-abortion bills, but opponents are set to challenge the legisation in federal court.
More than a thousand pro-choice and anti-abortion demonstrators packed the state capitol in Austin late on Friday night as senators voted on legislation that has made Texas the focus of nationwide abortion-rights activism.
The senate passed House Bill 2 by 19 votes to 11 just before midnight local time. Texas governor Rick Perry is now due to sign it off.
Texas is one of several states that have sought to restrict access to abortions this year, but it has attracted the most attention due to the publicity surrounding Democratic state senator Wendy Davis's bid to block the bill with an almost 11-hour filibuster.
"The key will be what the courts will do," Sylvia Garcia, a Democratic senator for Houston and a former judge, said before the vote. "I think the Texas proposal is on a path to litigation, to being held unconstitutional. We'll have to wait for the courts to ultimately decide."













Comment: Brazil is also a country of extreme poverty and corruption, which accounts for the violence, and it is the reason its citizens have had enough and are taking to the streets:
Revolution? Brazilian protests swells to millions: government calls emergency meeting
'People Revolution' spreads to Brazil: Thousands take to streets in anti-government protests