The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is the Texas “heartbeat law” that prohibits termination of a pregnancy after six weeks. The Supreme Court ruled that abortion providers can challenge the law, and some abortion supporters believe that they won. However, the abortion ban remains in place. Jennifer Graham suggested that we look at the reaction of Justice Sonia Sotomayor to see who really won the decision.
Sotomayor, whose remarks on the “religious”
nature of anti-abortion arguments made headlines during last week’s oral
arguments for another abortion case, said, “The court should have put an end to
the madness months ago, before SB 8 first went into effect. It failed to do so
then, and it fails again today.
The “madness” to which Sotomayor refers is
the nation’s most restrictive abortion law, which bans abortion after cardiac activity
is detected in an embryo. The ban became effective Sept. 1, despite legal
efforts to at least temporarily block it. It was challenged not only by
abortion providers, but by the U.S. Department of Justice, which maintains that
the law violates the U.S. Constitution and federal law….
At issue was a provision in the Texas law
that allows anyone, regardless of where they live, to sue an abortion provider
or anyone else who helps someone obtain an abortion in Texas after six weeks.
The Guttmacher Institute, a nonprofit that advocates for abortion rights, calls
this a “cruel new twist” in abortion restrictions, and others have called it a “sue
thy neighbor” law that enables vigilantism for financial gain.
The Texas law, along with the Mississippi
case (Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization) that the Supreme Court is
considering, doesn’t mean that women can’t get abortions, only that they can’t
get them in these states after six and 15 weeks’ gestation, respectively. In its
indictment of the law, the Guttmacher Institute says that this is a hardship
for Texas women who would have to drive hundreds of miles to get an abortion in
Kansas or New Mexico.
After describing “the wailing and
gnashing of teeth among abortion supporters,” Graham reminded her readers that
the 49th anniversary of Roe v. Wade will be January 22, less than
six weeks away now. No one knows what the Supreme Court will decide, but the
ruling on the Texas law appears to be a win for those who oppose abortion.
No comments:
Post a Comment