The
lawsuit, filed in state court on Friday by Congregation L'Dor
Va-Dor, also says that the abortion ban violates the right to
privacy guaranteed by the state constitution.
"Our office is confident that this law will ultimately withstand
all legal challenges," a spokesman for Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis said in an email.
The U.S. Supreme Court established a right to abortion
nationwide in its landmark 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade, but a
draft opinion leaked last month suggests that the court's
Republican-appointed majority is poised to overturn that law.
The synagogue said Florida's law, which DeSantis signed in
April, violated the state constitution's guarantee of religious
freedom.
"For Jews, all life is precious and thus the decision to bring
new life into the world is not taken lightly or determined by
state fiat," the lawsuit said. "In Jewish law, abortion is
necessary if required to protect the health, mental or physical
well-being of the women or for many other reasons not permitted
(by Florida's law)."
The lawsuit also said that the state's constitution guarantees a
right to abortion, citing an earlier ruling by the state's
highest court. A group of Florida abortion providers, including
affiliates of Planned Parenthood, brought a similar challenge in
a separate lawsuit earlier this month.
Florida is one of 11 states in which high courts have recognized
that the state constitutions protect abortion rights, according
to the Center for Reproductive Rights.
Other Republican-led states around the country are preparing to
pass new restrictions on abortion, while some Democratic-led
states have moved to pass laws protecting those who help women
from other states obtain abortions.
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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