Hobbs said on Twitter she ordered all abortion-related
prosecutions centralized under the office of Attorney General
Kristin Mays, also a Democrat and abortion rights advocate,
stripping that authority from county prosecutors, many of them
Republicans.
The measure is certain to generate opposition from local
prosecutors whose decision-making would be curtailed, and the
Republican House speaker told the Arizona Republic newspaper
that legislative staff were reviewing the order to determine its
legality.
The governor also directed state agencies to refuse aid to any
out-of-state investigation regarding abortion services that
would be legal in Arizona; to decline extradition requests from
other states seeking to prosecute people for abortion; and
create an advisory council on how to expand access in Arizona.
The executive orders were issued on the eve of the anniversary
of the Supreme Court ruling overturning the right to an
abortion.
The June 24, 2022, Dobbs decision struck down the 1972 Roe v.
Wade ruling that had largely protected abortion rights in the
United States.
That triggered existing laws in some states that would impose
restrictions in the event Roe was ever lifted, and prompted
other Republican-led states to pass new abortion limits.
In March 2022, in anticipation of the Supreme Court ruling,
Arizona's Republican governor at the time, Doug Ducey, signed a
bill banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The measure
made exceptions for medical emergencies, but not for rape.
Ducey was legally barred from seeking a third term in November,
when Hobbs defeated the Republican nominee, Kari Lake.
Ben Toma, the Republican speaker of the Arizona state House of
Representatives, questioned Hobbs' authority to take over all
abortion-related prosecutions.
"At a minimum, this order shows disrespect and contempt for the
judiciary," Toma told the Arizona Republic. "The governor cannot
unilaterally divert statutory authority to prosecute criminal
cases from Arizona's 15 county attorneys to the attorney
general."
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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