Texas's Drive to Restrict Abortion

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Texas's Drive to Restrict Abortion globalpolicyreview.org [email protected] Texas’s Drive to Restrict Abortion By Deepa Mani Policy Briefs Team 29 July 2021 The Texas Legislature, where severe restrictions were passed to limit women’s access to abortion. Source: Wikimedia Commons Amidst the re-energised assault on abortion in Texas, this brief traces Texas’ abortion restrictions over the last decade. It will first look at Texas’ legislation from 2011 to 2021 and its effects on women’s safety, and will more specifically look at how the state of Texas used COVID-19 to further its desire to outlaw abortion. The paper will also discuss who these restrictions most affect within society, and finally, the article will conclude with two policy recommendations that could be utilised to ease the situation. At the start of the COVID-19 lockdown in March 2020, Governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, signed an executive order prohibiting all surgical procedures which were not medically necessary, including abortions. This order ultimately forced clinics to pause their abortion procedures for around four weeks. 2 IWI BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE IWI: INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S INITIATIVE Background The war against women’s abortion rights in Texas has intensified over the last decade. While the number of women who required reproductive assistance increased between 2000 and 2011, the state’s ability to provide this care shrunk during this period. The amount of care provided decreased even despite progressive reforms the state made in 2007, when Texas’ Women’s Health Program was created, which provides contraceptive care for women 175% below the poverty line. (Guttmacher Policy Review, 2014). In 2011, after cutting the state family planning budget from $111 million to $37.9 million, the state attempted and subsequently failed to exclude abortion providers from federally funded Medicaid Waiver programs, which are utilised by low-income women to access healthcare (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). In the subsequent year, Texas continued to challenge federal dollars given to Planned Parenthood and other reproductive health clinics. After the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services did not accept the Women’s Health Program renewal request due to its restrictive nature, which banned women from choosing their providers, the state absorbed the costs of Texas’ Women’s Health Groups (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). As a result of this decrease in funding, the number of reproductive health clinics providing abortion services dwindled. In the summer of 2013, Governor Rick Perry signed House Bill 2B (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). This bill possessed four further restrictions on abortion, which included banning abortions from 20 weeks “post-fertilisation” (with some exceptions), requiring physicians who perform abortions to have admitting powers in a hospital 30 miles from the clinic, requiring medication-induced abortion to follow an outdated protocol, and mandating all abortion clinics to meet the criteria of ambulatory surgical centres (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). These restrictions were challenged by Whole Women’s Health vs Hellerstedt, which was heard by the Supreme Court of the United States (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). In June 2016, the Supreme Court ruled that the admitting privileges and ambulatory surgical centre requirements were unconstitutional because they created an undue burden for women seeking abortion (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). Over the next few years, further measures were taken to restrict abortion in Texas, including proposing a law to bury fetal tissues after an abortion, attempts to defund Planned Parenthood, plans to dismantle groups such as the Women’s Health Advisory Committee, and plans to ban “taxpayer resource transactions” between cities, counties and abortion providers (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). In another bill in 2019, the Texas legislature required that a booklet entitled, “A Women’s Right to Know,” which underlines alternatives to abortion, be distributed to women before they receive an abortion (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). In the same year, alternative measures to abortion received increased funding of $90 million. These alternative measures––which prevent women from attaining actual abortion care––instead help fund things such as crisis pregnancy centres, which provide misleading information to prevent women from obtaining abortions (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). 3 IWI BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE IWI: INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S INITIATIVE Further restrictions amidst COVID-19 At the start of the COVID-19 lockdown in March 2020, Governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, signed an executive order prohibiting all surgical procedures which were not medically necessary, including abortions (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). This order ultimately forced clinics to pause their abortion procedures for around four weeks. On November 23, 2020, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals supported the Texas government’s attempt to remove Planned Parenthood from the Medicaid program (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021). On May 19th, 2021, the governor signed into law the “fetal heartbeat” ban on abortion. (Najmabadi, 2021). This bill is one of the most restrictive bills in the country, and bans abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, thus banning the procedure from week 6 of pregnancy. (Najmabadi, 2021). It also allows for third parties to sue abortion providers, and does not include exemptions for victims of incest or rape. (Najmabadi, 2021) It has been nearly 50 years since the ruling of Roe v. Wade, where abortion was upheld as a women’s right by the Supreme Court of the United States. According to the precedent of Roe v. Wade, it is a woman’s right to receive an abortion, and abortion should be supported by state and federal law. The actions by the state of Texas in recent history have compromised this fundamental right that a woman has over her body, and has exposed women to further exposure to COVID-19 as they are forced to travel to find abortion care. More so, COVID-19 has exacerbated underlying socioeconomic issues, including access to abortion (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2020). TxPEP published two studies in 2020 indicating that Texas’ restrictive laws on abortion affect Latinx and low-income individuals the most, and suggest that new restrictions brought by the pandemic will most severely affect minority groups (Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2020) (Dixon, 2021). Additionally, a study entitled, The Safety and Quality of Abortion Care in the United States indicates that restrictive abortion laws prolong when women can receive abortions, thus putting these individuals at higher risk (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine et al., 2018). As a result of Abbot’s March 2020 executive order, the nearest out-of-state abortion clinic was over 100 miles away for 94% of counties in Texas (White et al.).The severity of the situation must be addressed, as the most underprivileged communities in Texas are now facing further obstacles to abortion. 4 IWI BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE IWI: INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S INITIATIVE Policy Recommendations Texas must create oversight to protect the safety of women by separating ideology-driven anti-abortion sentiments from science and health-driven care. As one of 10 states that has attempted to leverage COVID-19 against abortion, Texas provides a clear example of how the continued attempt by the state to block access to abortion intensified under the guise of COVID-19 measures. (White & Grossman, 2021) This article has attempted to underline how Texas is utilising the state of emergency facilitated by COVID-19 to block women’s access to basic health care. The following are policy recommendations to create resources for women to obtain abortions and learn more about the consequences of Texas’ restrictive abortion policies: Government action The U.S. federal government must protect the constitutional rights of women under Roe v. Wade. Access to telemediation and insurance coverage for abortions and clinics must be enforced by the federal government. The Biden Administration should utilise executive orders to ensure that women have access to funding to receive abortions and related care. Advisory group A new advisory group must be created by the federal government to investigate this dire situation in Texas and to investigate how these abortion policies affect women. 5 IWI BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE IWI: INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S INITIATIVE REFERENCES Dixon, L. & Texas Policy Evaluation Project, 2021. The College of Liberal Arts The University of Texas at Austin. UT College of Liberal Arts: TxPEP. Available at: https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/txpep/releases/abortion-restriction-disparities.php [Accessed May 9, 2021]. Guttmacher Policy Review, 2014. The State of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights In the State of Texas: A Cautionary Tale. Me & My OBG. Available at: http://www.meandmyobg.com/2014/06/the- state-of-sexual-and-reproductive-health-and-rights-in-the-state-of-texas-a-cautionary-tale/ [Accessed May 9, 2021]. Najmabadi, S., 2021. Fetal "heartbeat" bill, which could ban abortions at six weeks, nears passage in the Legislature. The Texas Tribune. Available at: https://www.texastribune.org/2021/05/03/texas-house- abortion-heartbeat/ [Accessed May 9, 2021]. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine et al., 2018. The Safety and Quality of Abortion Care in the United States. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK507236/
Recommended publications
  • Brief Amici Curiae of American Association of Pro-Life
    NO. 15-274 IN THE Supreme Court of the United States WHOLE WOMAN’S HEALTH, ET AL., Petitioners, v. JOHN HELLERSTEDT, M.D., COMMISSIONER OF THE TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES, ET AL., Respondents. On Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PRO-LIFE OBSTETRICIANS AND GYNECOLOGISTS, AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PEDIATRICIANS, CHRISTIAN MEDICAL & DENTAL ASSOCIATION, CATHOLIC MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AND PHYSICIANS FOR LIFE IN SUPPORT OF RESPONDENTS DAVID A. CORTMAN STEVEN H. ADEN KEVIN H. THERIOT Counsel of Record ALLIANCE DEFENDING ALLIANCE DEFENDING FREEDOM FREEDOM 1000 Hurricane Shoals 440 1st St., N.W., Suite 600 Road, NE Washington, DC 20001 Suite D-1100 (202) 393-8690 Atlanta, GA 30043 [email protected] Counsel for Amici Curiae i TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ..................................... iii INTEREST OF AMICI CURIAE ............................... 1 SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT .................................... 3 ARGUMENT I. HB2 APPROPRIATELY EXPRESSES TEXAS'S CONSTITUTIONAL INTEREST IN SAFEGUARDING WOMEN'S HEALTH AND MAINTAINING MEDICAL STANDARDS ..................... 4 A. Abortion, Like Many Outpatient Procedures, Carries Inherent Serious Risks .............................................................. 6 B. Drug-Induced Abortion Carries Greater Risks than Surgical Abortion. ......... 9 C. Recognizing these Risks, Texas has Taken Appropriate Steps to Safeguard Women’s Health and Safety by Regulating Abortion in a Manner Consistent With
    [Show full text]
  • In the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas Austin Division
    Case 1:18-cv-00500-LY Document 31-1 Filed 08/27/18 Page 1 of 88 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS AUSTIN DIVISION WHOLE WOMAN’S HEALTH § ALLIANCE, et al., § § Plaintiffs, § Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-00500-LY § v. § § KEN PAXTON, et al., § § Defendants. § § 1 DEFENDANTS’0F MOTION TO DISMISS UNDER FEDERAL RULE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE 12(B)(1) AND 12(B)(6) 1 Defendants Ken Paxton, Attorney General of Texas; Cecile Young, Acting Ex- ecutive Commissioner of the Texas Health & Human Services Commission; John W. Hellerstedt, M.D., Commissioner of the Texas Department of State Health Services; and Scott Freshour, Interim Executive Director of the Texas Medical Board, jointly file this Motion in their official capacities. Case 1:18-cv-00500-LY Document 31-1 Filed 08/27/18 Page 2 of 88 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Index of Authorities ...................................................................................................... iii Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1 Statement of Facts ......................................................................................................... 1 I. The Court Lacks Subject-Matter Jurisdiction. ...................................................... 5 A. Plaintiffs lack standing to bring a substantive due process claim. ............... 7 1. The Provider Plaintiffs do not have standing to assert claims on behalf of their patients. ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Undue Burden Beyond Texas: an Analysis of Abortion Clinic Closures, Births, and Abortions in Wisconsin
    NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES UNDUE BURDEN BEYOND TEXAS: AN ANALYSIS OF ABORTION CLINIC CLOSURES, BIRTHS, AND ABORTIONS IN WISCONSIN Joanna Venator Jason Fletcher Working Paper 26362 http://www.nber.org/papers/w26362 NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1050 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 October 2019 Thanks to Jenny Higgins, Heather Royer, and Scott Cunningham for useful comments on the paper. Thanks to Lily Schultze and Jessica Polos for generous research support in collection of abortion data and timing of policy changes in Wisconsin and to Caitlin Myers for discussions of data collection practices. This study was funded by a grant from a private foundation and by the Herb Kohl Public Service Research Competition. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research. NBER working papers are circulated for discussion and comment purposes. They have not been peer-reviewed or been subject to the review by the NBER Board of Directors that accompanies official NBER publications. © 2019 by Joanna Venator and Jason Fletcher. All rights reserved. Short sections of text, not to exceed two paragraphs, may be quoted without explicit permission provided that full credit, including © notice, is given to the source. Undue Burden Beyond Texas: An Analysis of Abortion Clinic Closures, Births, And Abortions in Wisconsin Joanna Venator and Jason Fletcher NBER Working Paper No. 26362 October 2019 JEL No. I1,I28,J13,J18 ABSTRACT In this paper, we estimate the impacts of abortion clinic closures on access to clinics in terms of distance and congestion, abortion rates, and birth rates.
    [Show full text]
  • In the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
    Case: 19-30353 Document: 00514971298 Page: 1 Date Filed: 05/24/2019 No. 19-30353 In the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit In re: Rebekah Gee, in her official capacity as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health; James E. Stew- art, Sr., in his official capacity as District Attorney for Caddo Parish, Petitioners, June Medical Services, L.L.C., on behalf of its patients, physicians, and staff, doing business as Hope Medical Group for Women; John Doe 1, Doctor, on behalf of them- selves and their patients; John Doe 3, Doctor, on behalf of themselves and their patients, Plaintiffs, v. Rebekah Gee, in her official capacity as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health; James E. Stewart, Sr., in his official capacity as District Attorney for Caddo Parish, Defendants. On Petition for Writ of Mandamus to the United States District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana (Baton Rouge) No. 3:17-cv-00404-BAJ-RLB BRIEF FOR THE STATES OF TEXAS AND MISSISSIPPI AS AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS Ken Paxton Kyle D. Hawkins Attorney General of Texas Solicitor General [email protected] Jeffrey C. Mateer First Assistant Attorney General Heather Gebelin Hacker Beth Klusmann Office of the Attorney General Assistant Solicitors General P.O. Box 12548 (MC 059) Austin, Texas 78711-2548 Tel.: (512) 936-1700 Counsel for Amici Curiae Fax: (512) 474-2697 Case: 19-30353 Document: 00514971298 Page: 2 Date Filed: 05/24/2019 Certificate of Interested Persons No. 19-30353 In re: Rebekah Gee, in her official capacity as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health; James E.
    [Show full text]
  • 21.112.1146 1 BILL ANALYSIS CSHB 3760 By
    BILL ANALYSIS C.S.H.B. 3760 By: Oliverson Public Health Committee Report (Substituted) BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE C.S.H.B. 3760 seeks to revise certain provisions of state abortion law, including by making changes in three principal areas. The bill abolishes discriminatory abortions motivated by the race, gender, ethnicity, sex, or disability of the preborn child and establishes a related criminal offense and civil remedies. Another group of changes, enforceable only through private civil actions, prohibits abortion after the developmental point when a preborn child's heartbeat is detectable, subject to medical emergency exceptions. Finally, either contingent on certain events or effective in 2025, the bill prohibits abortion in the state except in cases of medical emergency. The different effective dates will allow various legal challenges to current abortion jurisprudence to be sequentially considered by courts of competent jurisdiction and will allow the legislature and the office of the attorney general to respond appropriately to applicable court rulings. CRIMINAL JUSTICE IMPACT It is the committee's opinion that this bill expressly does one or more of the following: creates a criminal offense, increases the punishment for an existing criminal offense or category of offenses, or changes the eligibility of a person for community supervision, parole, or mandatory supervision. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY It is the committee's opinion that rulemaking authority is expressly granted to the executive commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission in SECTION 5.01 of this bill. ANALYSIS C.S.H.B. 3760 revises state abortion law to prohibit discriminatory abortion, provide for the availability of perinatal palliative care, prohibit abortions after a preborn child's heartbeat is detectable by standard medical methods, and provide for civil and criminal enforcement of certain provisions.
    [Show full text]
  • Upholding a 40-Year-Old Promise: Why the Texas Sonogram Act Is Unlawful According to Planned Parenthood V
    Pace Law Review Volume 34 Issue 1 Winter 2014 Article 4 January 2014 Upholding a 40-Year-Old Promise: Why the Texas Sonogram Act is Unlawful According to Planned Parenthood v. Casey Vicki Toscano Nova Southeastern University Elizabeth Reiter Guttman & Wallace Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/plr Part of the Health Law and Policy Commons, Law and Gender Commons, and the State and Local Government Law Commons Recommended Citation Vicki Toscano and Elizabeth Reiter, Upholding a 40-Year-Old Promise: Why the Texas Sonogram Act is Unlawful According to Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 34 Pace L. Rev. 128 (2014) Available at: https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/plr/vol34/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Law at DigitalCommons@Pace. It has been accepted for inclusion in Pace Law Review by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Pace. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Upholding a 40-Year-Old Promise: Why the Texas Sonogram Act is Unlawful According to Planned Parenthood v. Casey Vicki Toscano* and Elizabeth Reiter** I. Introduction Since 2003, a woman seeking an abortion in Texas must undergo one additional medical procedure at least 24 hours prior to receiving an abortion in order for the woman’s consent to an abortion to be considered “voluntary and informed” under the law.1 Although this medical procedure may not be deemed medically necessary by physicians, the state has declared it necessary for all women seeking an abortion.2 In the early stages of pregnancy, this procedure often requires the insertion of a large probe into the vagina of the pregnant woman, even against her will.3 * Vicki Toscano is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Nova Southeastern University.
    [Show full text]
  • House Committee on Public Health Hb 3760 Public
    PUBLIC COMMENTS HB 3760 HOUSE COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC HEALTH Hearing Date: April 7, 2021 8:00 AM Bergan Casey, Mrs Planned parenthood of greater Texas Austin, TX Legislators need to keep their hands off our bodies. Abortion is a difficult and sometimes necessary procedure that is a women’s business and not yours. There are so many more important issues for you to be handling this session including gun control, energy regulation and education funding than restricting a woman’s access. Haleigh Wallace Self Austin, TX Dear representatives, I am writing to you with deep concern about the 7 anti-abortion bills that are scheduled to be heard on Wednesday of next week. I want to share with you my story. It is a very uncomfortable thing to do, but I hope that you read it, and I hope that you can understand the way that these anti-abortion bills affect real people. Last year, I found myself in a position where I had had a sexual encounter that I did not want to have with someone that I did not want to have that with. Despite using a condom and taking emergency contraception immediately afterwards, I found myself pregnant. For my physical and mental health (and because very simply, I do not want to bring a child into this world), I knew that continuing the pregnancy was not an option for me. Because of all of the regulations that Texas already has in place, this was not a fast or easy process. Because there are so few clinics left in the state, each one is very full, and the soonest I could get an appointment was almost two weeks later.
    [Show full text]
  • Reproductive Rights in the Time of COVID 19
    Reproductive Rights in the Time of COVID19 By Autumn Katz, Managing Senior Counsel, U.S. Litigation and Nimra Chowdhry, State Legislative Counsel, U.S. Policy & Advocacy Center for Reproductive Rights, New York, NY Share this: In the early months of the COVID19 pandemic, many state officials implemented emergency orders responding to this unprecedented public health crisis. The ostensible purpose of these orders was to reduce the impact and stop the spread of COVID- 19. While some states have expanded or protected access to essential abortion care during this time, others sought to use the pandemic as an opportunity to ban some or all abortions. Lawsuits filed by the Center for Reproductive Rights, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Lawyering Project, pro bono law firms, and local attorneys were largely successful in blocking these harmful measures and restoring access to abortion care during the COVID19 pandemic. However, the fight to preserve abortion access is far from over. Despite being one of the most common and safest procedures performed in the United States,1 abortion remains one of the most restricted and regulated medical procedures in the country. States have enacted almost 500 medically unnecessary restrictions on abortion care since 2011 alone.2 These restrictions have made it increasingly difficult for abortion providers to remain open and push abortion care further out of reach.3 Further, these restrictions exacerbate the already difficult circumstances under which women4 seek and access abortion services, including the need to take time away from work, arrange childcare and travel, and pay for the procedure itself, since Medicaid and many private insurance plans do not cover the procedure.
    [Show full text]
  • The​ ​Effects​ ​Of​ ​Defunding:​ ​Texas​ ​And​ ​Indiana
    The Effects of Defunding: Texas and Indiana ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 1. Texas Texas state legislators have been attacking Planned Parenthood health centers in a variety of different ways for almost a decade. They were successfully able to remove Medicaid funding from the state’s Women’s Health Program which allowed them to essentially, legally defund Planned Parenthood health centers. The Texas Policy Evaluation Project tracked the effects of this defunding by surveying 300 pregnant women seeking an abortion in Texas, and almost half said they were not able to get the birth control they wanted within the three months prior to become pregnant. There was also an increase in maternal mortality rates from 72 to 148 between 2010 and 2012 due to pregnancy and childbirth complications. Also, the number of births paid for by Medicaid increased by 27% according to a research team at the University of Texas at Austin. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ 2. Indiana The Indiana state government has been slashing various sources of funding to Planned Parenthood since 2011. This attack caused 5 different clinics to close across the state, none of these offered abortion services. In 2013, the Planned Parenthood in Scott County was forced to close, leaving the county’s 24,000 residents without a place to receive HIV testing. This closure resulted in disaster for the county, coming to a head in 2015. An HIV outbreak overtook the county because residents were sharing opioid needles and were not getting tested. When the outbreak was at its worst, 20 new cases of HIV were being diagnosed every week. There were almost 200 cases by the time the outbreak was under control.
    [Show full text]
  • Abortion Providers Facing Threats, Restrictions, and Harassment Abortion Providers Facing Threats, Restrictions, and Harassment
    Abortion Providers Facing Threats, Restrictions, and Harassment Abortion Providers Facing Threats, Restrictions, and Harassment © 2009 Center for Reproductive Rights Printed in the United States Any part of this report may be copied, translated, or adapted with permission from the authors, provided that the parts copied are distributed free or at cost (not for profit) and the Center for Reproductive Rights is acknowledged as the author. Any commercial reproduction requires prior written permission from the Center for Reproductive Rights. The Center for Reproductive Rights would appreciate receiving a copy of any materials in which information from this report is used. Center for Reproductive Rights 120 Wall Street, 14th Floor New York, NY 10005 United States Tel +1 917 637 3600 Fax +1 917 637 3666 [email protected] www.reproductiverights.org TABLE OF CONTENTS 7 FOREWORD 11 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 12 GLOssary 14 EXECUTIVE SUMMary 20 INTRODUCTION 22 BACKGROUND 22 Abortion in the United States 24 U.S. Legal Framework on Abortion 25 History of Harassment, Intimidation, and Violence against Abortion Providers in the U.S. 26 HUMAN RIGHTS FRAMEWORK 26 Human Rights and Human Rights Defenders 28 Reproductive Rights Are Human Rights 29 Reproductive Rights Activists Are Human Rights Defenders 31 Healthcare Providers Are Human Rights Defenders 31 U.S. Abortion Providers Are Human Rights Defenders 32 APPLIcatION OF HUMAN RIGHTS FRAMEWORK TO SELECT FINDINGS 33 Violations of Reproductive Rights Reverend Paul Schenck of the anti-abortion group Operation
    [Show full text]
  • ABORTION CLINIC SHUTDOWN CASES at the SUPREME COURT Media Kit
    ABORTION CLINIC SHUTDOWN CASES AT THE SUPREME COURT Media Kit On November 13th, the United States Supreme Court decided to take up a challenge to the deceptive abortion clinic shutdown law in Texas. In the case, Whole Woman’s Health v. Cole, the Center for Reproductive Rights is representing Whole Woman’s Health, a women’s health care provider, in its efforts to ensure women’s access to safe and legal abortion care. Below is a collection of background resources about the cases including overviews, key statistics, Q&A’s, media coverage, and a list of the briefs that have been filed with the Court. WHAT’S AT STAKE The U.S. Supreme Court has made it clear that women have a constitutional right to abortion and that states cannot pass laws that create an undue burden for women exercising that right. In the Supreme Court’s 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey affirming Roe v. Wade, Justice Kennedy wrote that, “these matters, involving the most intimate and personal choices a person may make in a lifetime, choices central to personal dignity and autonomy, are central to the liberty protected by the 14th Amendment.” Politicians in Texas and Mississippi are trying to sneak around the Constitution and four decades of Supreme Court precedent with deceptive laws that do nothing to improve women’s health care and only make it more difficult, if not impossible, to obtain safe and legal abortion. Should politicians in Texas and Mississippi succeed in their underhanded efforts, clinic shutdown laws would leave only 10 providers in the entire state of Texas and would shutter the last clinic in Mississippi, forcing women to travel hundreds of miles or turn to drastic or illegal options.
    [Show full text]
  • SUMMARY CHART 45 Amicus Briefs Filed in the Supreme Court in Opposition to Texas’S Abortion Clinic Shutdown Law Whole Woman’S Health V
    SUMMARY CHART 45 Amicus briefs filed in the Supreme Court in opposition to Texas’s abortion clinic shutdown law Whole Woman’s Health v. Cole A diverse and impressive set of stakeholders have filed 45 amicus briefs urging the Supreme Court to once again affirm longstanding precedent and uphold a woman’s constitutional right to access safe and legal abortion services. This term, the United States Supreme Court will review provisions of a sweeping Texas law that imposes numerous restrictions on access to abortion. This case challenges two provisions in that law: (1) the requirement that doctors who provide abortion services must obtain admitting privileges at local hospitals no farther than 30 miles away from the clinic; and (2) the requirement that abortion facilities must meet building specifications to essentially become mini-hospitals (also known as ambulatory surgical centers, or ASCs). The law, commonly referred to as “HB 2”, was designed to shut down abortion clinics and has already forced more than half of Texas’ clinics to close their doors. If the challenged provisions are upheld, it will leave 10 or fewer abortion clinics open in Texas, the second-most populous state in the nation, and will gravely harm women in Texas. A broad array of organizations and individuals – including leading medical experts, social scientists, legal experts, federal/state and local governmental entities and officeholders, Republican voices, military officers, religious leaders, ethicists, reproductive rights and other civil rights advocates, and many others – have filed briefs in support of Whole Woman’s Health and other Texas providers – the Petitioners in the case – in what will be the most consequential reproductive rights case in the last two decades.
    [Show full text]