US Justice Department again moves to halt Texas abortion law

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Us Justice Department Again Moves To Halt Texas Abortion Law
People participate in the Houston Women’s March against the Texas abortion ban earlier this month, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Paul J Weber, Associated Press

The Biden administration urged the courts again Monday night to step in and suspend a new Texas law that has banned most abortions since early September, as clinics hundreds of miles away remained busy with Texas patients making long journeys to access care.

The latest attempt comes three days after the 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the nation’s most restrictive abortion law after a brief 48-hour window last week in which Texas abortion providers — following a blistering ruling by a lower court — had rushed to bring in patients again.

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The days ahead could now be key in determining the immediate future of the law known as Senate Bill 8, including whether there is another attempt to have the US Supreme Court weigh in.


 

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The law bans abortions in Texas once cardiac activity is detected, which is usually at six weeks and before some women even know they are pregnant.

Although other GOP-controlled states have had similar early bans on abortions blocked by courts, the Texas law has proved durable because the state offloads enforcement solely onto private citizens, who can collect at least 10,000 dollars (£7,350) in damages if they successfully sue abortion providers.

“If Texas’s scheme is permissible, no constitutional right is safe from state-sanctioned sabotage of this kind,” the Department of Justice told the appeals court.

In wording that seemed to be a message to the Supreme Court, the Justice Department raised the spectre that if allowed to stand, the legal structure created in enacting the law could be used to circumvent even the Supreme Court’s rulings in 2008 and 2010 on gun rights and campaign financing.

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Abortion Texas
People attend the Women’s March ATX rally, at the Texas State Capitol in Austin earlier this month (Stephen Spillman/AP)

It is not clear when the 5th Circuit court will decide whether to extend what is currently a temporary order allowing the Texas law to stand.

Just as some Texas abortion providers last week quickly moved to once again perform abortions for patients past six weeks, the New Orleans-based appeals court set that order aside while it reviews the case.

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Planned Parenthood, the largest abortion provider in Texas, relayed to the court in a separate filing on Monday night numerous stories of Texas women impacted by the law, including one patient they said was only 12 years old.

“Oklahoma staff are working overtime to care for Texas patients denied abortions,” lawyers for Planned Parenthood told the court.

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