Texas loses bid to reinstate ban on second-trimester abortion procedure
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[October 14, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - The state of Texas on Tuesday
lost its bid before a U.S. appeals court to reinstate a law that would
have effectively banned the most common abortion procedure used by
doctors for terminating second-trimester pregnancies.
A three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New
Orleans sided with abortion rights activists in affirming a 2017
lower-court decision that struck down the law and temporarily barred its
enforcement.
Tuesday's ruling, unless overturned on further appeal, makes the
injunction against the abortion restriction permanent.
The 2-1 majority appellate opinion held that the Republican-enacted
legislation, known as Senate Bill 8, "unduly burdens a woman's
constitutionally protected right" to terminate her own pregnancy before
the fetus is considered viable.
The opinion was written by appellate Judge James Dennis, who was
appointed to the 5th Circuit by President Bill Clinton, a Democrat. It
upheld an earlier ruling by U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel of Austin,
appointed by Republican President George W. Bush.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, named as a defendant in the lawsuit
challenging the abortion measure, said his office was analyzing the 5th
Circuit's decision "and evaluating all options for further review."
The measure outlawed the standard abortion method used after 15 weeks of
pregnancy - dilation and evacuation, or D&E - unless the physician first
performed a separate, additional procedure in the woman's body to bring
about the demise of the fetus.
That requirement, Dennis wrote, "forces abortion providers to act
contrary to their medical judgment and the best interest of their
patient" by performing extra procedures that "are dangerous, painful,
invasive and potentially experimental."
The Texas law refers to the D&E procedure, involving the use of suction
and forceps to bring fetal tissue through the woman's cervix, as a
"dismemberment abortion," a non-medical term eschewed by doctors.
The law's advocates say its restrictions promote the state's interest in
preventing fetal pain, but Dennis in his opinion wrote, "We find little
merit in this argument."
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A protester holds up a sign in front of the U.S. Supreme Court on
the morning the court takes up a major abortion case focusing on
whether a Texas law that imposes strict regulations on abortion
doctors and clinic buildings interferes with the constitutional
right of a woman to end her pregnancy, in Washington March 2, 2016.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
As the appellate decision noted, major medical organizations,
including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
and the American Medical Association, have concluded that fetal pain
is impossible before 24 weeks of gestation - well beyond the point
when abortions are almost never performed.
Although D&Es are the safest abortion method after about 15 weeks of
pregnancy - roughly two weeks into the second trimester - nearly 90%
of all abortions are performed in the first trimester, according to
the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion
rights.
Texas, the most populous Republican-dominated state, has been at the
forefront of efforts to impose abortion restrictions.
Whole Woman's Health, the lead plaintiff challenging the D&E ban,
also led a legal fight in 2016 that ended in the U.S. Supreme
Court's striking down a Texas abortion law that had shuttered nearly
half the state's clinics by imposing strict regulations on doctors
and facilities.
Similar D&E abortion bans in other states, including Alabama,
Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana and Oklahoma, have
also been struck down by the courts, according to the Center or
Reproductive Rights.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie Adler
and Michael Perry)
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