U.S. Supreme Court hears challenges to Texas near-total abortion ban
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[November 01, 2021]
By Andrew Chung and Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court is set to hear arguments on Monday in challenges by President Joe
Biden's administration and abortion providers to a Texas law that
imposes a near-total ban on the procedure and lets private citizens
enforce it - a novel design that has shielded it from being blocked by
lower courts.
Abortion rights in the United States are hanging in the balance as the
nine justices take up the dispute over the Texas law barring abortions
after about six weeks of pregnancy before hearing arguments on Dec. 1
over the legality of a Mississippi measure prohibiting the procedure
after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The Texas dispute reached the Supreme Court with unusual speed. The
justices agreed to take up the matter on Oct. 22, bypassing lower courts
that are considering the challenges. The Supreme Court on a 5-4 vote on
Sept. 1 declined to halt the law .
The challenges will determine whether federal courts can hear lawsuits
aimed at striking down the Texas law and whether the U.S. government
even can sue to try to block it. If the justices keep federal courts out
of the process by virtue of the law's unique design, it could be
replicated in other states and curtail abortion access in other parts of
the country.
The Texas and Mississippi laws are among a series of Republican-backed
abortion restrictions pursued at the state level in recent years. Lower
courts blocked the Mississippi law.
Abortion opponents hope the Supreme Court, with its 6-3 conservative
majority, will roll back abortion rights or even overturn its 1973 Roe
v. Wade decision that recognized a woman's constitutional right to
terminate a pregnancy and legalized the procedure nationwide.
The Supreme Court will hear separate oral arguments lasting hours in the
two challenges to the Texas law.
The law bans abortion at a point in time when many women do not yet
realize they are pregnant. There is an exception for a documented
medical emergency but not for pregnancies resulting from incest or rape.
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Storm clouds roll in over the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington,
U.S., September 1, 2021. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
The Texas measure takes enforcement out of the hands
of state officials, instead enabling private citizens to sue anyone
who performs or assists a woman in getting an abortion after cardiac
activity is detected in the embryo.
That feature made it more difficult to directly sue the state,
helping shield the law from being immediately blocked. Individual
citizens can be awarded a minimum of $10,000 for bringing successful
lawsuits under the law. Critics have said this provision lets people
act as anti-abortion bounty hunters, a characterization its
proponents reject.
The abortion providers and Biden's administration have called the
law unconstitutional and explicitly designed to evade judicial
review.
The law's design has deterred most abortions in Texas, which is the
second most populous U.S. state, behind only California, with about
29 million people.
The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in the
abortion providers case refused to block the law and indicated that
federal courts lack jurisdiction to intervene. After a federal judge
in the Biden administration's challenge blocked the law on Oct. 6,
the 5th Circuit quickly reinstated it.
Mississippi has asked the justices to overturn Roe v. Wade . The
Texas attorney general has signaled he also would like to see that
ruling overturned . Before that landmark ruling, many states
outlawed abortion.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung and Lawrence Hurley in Washington;
Editing by Will Dunham)
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