US Supreme Court allows emergency abortions in Idaho for now
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[June 28, 2024]
By John Kruzel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Thursday to permit
- for now - abortions to be performed in Idaho when pregnant women are
facing medical emergencies, as the justices dispensed with the
contentious issue without actually deciding the underlying legal issue
in the case.
The 6-3 ruling revived a federal judge's decision that a 1986 U.S. law
called the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA) takes
precedence over Idaho's Republican-backed near-total abortion ban when
the two conflict. EMTALA requires hospitals that receive funds under the
federal Medicare program to "stabilize" patients with emergency medical
conditions.
President Joe Biden's administration had sued Idaho over its abortion
law. Idaho is among six states with abortion bans that offer no
exceptions to protect the health of pregnant women.
A version of the ruling - an unsigned, one-line order - was
inadvertently posted to the court's website on Wednesday in the second
instance in the past two years of the disclosure of a major abortion
decision before its formal issuance.
"Today's Supreme Court order ensures that women in Idaho can access the
emergency medical care they need while this case returns to the lower
courts," Biden said in a statement. "No woman should be denied care,
made to wait until she's near death, or forced to flee her home state
just to receive the health care she needs. This should never happen in
America."
"Yet, this is exactly what is happening in states across the country
since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade," Biden added, referring
to the 2022 decision that reversed the 1973 precedent that had
recognized a constitutional right to abortion.
Biden, seeking re-election this year, has sought to make abortion rights
a centerpiece of his campaign, as Democrats try to use the issue to
political advantage against Republicans in races across the country.
Donald Trump is the Republican candidate challenging Biden in the Nov. 5
U.S. election.
Trump as president appointed three of the six justices who were in the
majority in the 2022 ruling, and he has been on the defensive on the
abortion issue during this year's campaign. Trump has said that in
states with abortion bans he backs exceptions for rape, incest and to
protect the life of the mother, and also that he supports the
availability of in-vitro fertilization.
Thursday's order lifted a block, or stay, that the justices had placed
on the judge's ruling in January. But the Supreme Court did not resolve
the case on its merits, opting instead to dismiss it as "improvidently
granted." The case now heads to the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals for further consideration.
Mike Moyle, the Republican speaker of the Idaho House of Representatives
and one of the named parties in the case, expressed hope that the lower
courts would "allow Idaho to govern itself with its democratically
enacted law."
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A sign is seen in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on
the day the Supreme Court justices hear oral arguments over the
legality of Idaho's Republican-backed, near-total abortion ban in
medical-emergency situations, in Washington, U.S., April 24, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
'WE HAVE SQUANDERED IT'
Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson agreed with the court's
decision to lift its stay, but wrote in a separate opinion that she
would not have dismissed the case.
"This court had a chance to bring clarity and certainty to this
tragic situation, and we have squandered it," Jackson wrote. "And
for as long as we refuse to declare what the law requires, pregnant
patients in Idaho, Texas and elsewhere will be paying the price."
Following Roe's reversal, Republican-backed abortion bans were
enacted in a series of states. Idaho's law banned nearly all
abortions unless needed to prevent a mother's death, threatening
doctors who violate it with two to five years in prison and loss of
their medical license.
Advocates on both sides of the abortion question voiced
disappointment with Thursday's ruling.
"The court cleaned up part of the mess it created by allowing
Idaho's near-total abortion ban to go into effect temporarily, but
it refused to protect both long-term access to medically necessary
abortions and the supremacy of federal law," said Miriam
Becker-Cohen, a lawyer at the Constitutional Accountability Center,
a liberal legal group.
Danielle White, general counsel at the anti-abortion group Heartbeat
International, said the ruling "leaves us with more questions than
answers."
White said that the court "did not settle the question of whether
states are required to adopt a broad and sweeping view of EMTALA
that leaves them effectively powerless to protect mothers and their
unborn children from elective abortion - a question which may very
well come back to the court at another time."
Medical experts have said conditions that could threaten the woman's
life and health - from gestational hypertension to excessive
bleeding - could require an abortion to stabilize her or avoid
seizures, vital organ damage and failure, or the loss of the uterus.
In a May Reuters/Ipsos poll, 82% of registered voters responding,
including 88% of Democrats and 79% of Republicans, said they
supported requiring states with strict abortion bans to permit an
abortion if necessary to protect the health of a pregnant patient
facing a medical emergency.
(Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham)
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