New Mexico town delays banning abortion
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[November 04, 2022]
By Brad Brooks
CLOVIS, New Mexico (Reuters) - The city
commission of Clovis on Thursday put off a vote on an ordinance designed
to ban abortions within the New Mexico town near the Texas border,
fearing challenges to the move in a state where the procedure remains
legal.
Clovis was set to become the first town to pass a so-called "sanctuary
city for the unborn" ordinance in a state controlled by the Democratic
Party, according to anti-abortion advocates, who say it is part of a
national push into "blue" states.
Clovis does not have an abortion clinic, but could be a place that could
serve people from Republican-controlled Texas, to the east. Texas was
one of the first states to impose a near-total ban on abortion and
providers can face up to life in prison there.
On Monday, the city commission of the nearby town of Hobbs is expected
to take up a similar measure. Both Clovis and Hobbs are in conservative
eastern New Mexico. Hobbs also does not have an abortion clinic.
Thursday, all eight members of the Clovis commission said they want to
ban abortions, but seven voted to delay until they could perfect the
language to better protect against litigation.
Mayor Mike Morris, who led the meeting, reaffirmed that he is
anti-abortion, that he wants to see an ordinance pass and that he "does
not want to see Clovis become a destination for abortions." But he said
more work was needed on the proposed measure.
The architect of the ordinance is Jonathan Mitchell, a conservative
Texas lawyer who was the driving force behind Texas' 2021 "heartbeat"
abortion law.
Mitchell participated in the city commission meeting by phone. He said
the ordinance was based on federal law that should trump state laws. But
he acknowledged there could be benefit in delaying a final vote, if only
to see what new abortion rights legislation New Mexico lawmakers may
draft in their next session, which begins in January, and change the
city ordinance to combat it.
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Clovis resident Victoria Robledo speaks
in opposition to a proposed city ordinance that would ban abortions
during a city commission meeting in Clovis, New Mexico, U.S. on
November 3, 2022. REUTERS/Brad Brooks
The office of New Mexico Governor
Michelle Lujan Grisham told Reuters that the ordinance is clearly
against state law protecting the right to an abortion, and that it
is an affront to the rights and autonomy of all women in the region.
President Joe Biden visited New Mexico on Thursday, and White House
Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked about the possibility
of Clovis banning abortions.
"We have been very clear about what MAGA extreme Republicans are
trying to do when it comes to a woman's rights to choose," she said.
"They're trying to take that away, clearly, and in the most extreme
ways. What it's doing is it's putting women — women and girls' lives
at risk."
Mark Lee Dickson, a pastor from Texas, is the architect of the
"sanctuary city" movement, which has seen over 50 cities adopt
anti-abortion measures in Texas and other conservative states.
He was kicked out of Tuesday's meeting in Clovis by the mayor after
yelling "I'll pay for it!" in response to commissioners' worries
about the city being sued over the ordinance. He said the decision
to delay was a blow, but that he would continue the fight in Clovis.
Laura Wight, a Clovis resident helping lead Eastern New Mexico
Rising, a progressive group opposed to ordinance, welcomed the
delay.
"But we know there is still a fight ahead," she said.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Clovis, New Mexico; Additional
reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt aboard Air Force One; editing by Donna
Bryson, Aurora Ellis and Gerry Doyle)
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