Republican lawmakers and governors in several states are planning or considering forced-birth legislation mirroring Senate Bill 8 in Texas, which the U.S. Supreme Court allowed to go into effect this week—stunning and angering abortion providers and rights advocates across the country.
In a number of states where extreme anti-choice bills have been blocked by courts in recent years, far-right legislators are seeing the court’s decision as tacit approval of future laws that, like S.B. 8, would authorize private citizens to sue anyone who aids someone in obtaining abortion care after six weeks of pregnancy, enabling plaintiffs to win at least $10,000 in court and getting around Roe vs. Wade by keeping the state government itself from enforcing the bans.
“This is not a ‘What happens in Texas stays in Texas’ situation.”
—Kristin Ford, NARAL Pro-Choice America
Florida State Sen. Wilton Simpson, the Republican president of the chamber, said Thursday that the Supreme Court’s refusal to block S.B. 8 was “encouraging.”
With the Supreme Court effectively rendering Roe vs. Wade terminated in Texas for most people seeking an abortion while lower courts consider the law, the pro-choice research group Guttmacher Institute said S.B. 8 was “the tip of the iceberg.”
“It’s not a matter of whether that could be the end of Roe; it would be the end of Roe,” Laurie Bertram Roberts, co-founder of the Mississippi Reproductive Freedom Fund, told the Post. “What’s going on in Texas and Mississippi is that they are showing their hands. It’s a clear tell as to where the end game is.”
The AP reported that legislators in Arkansas, Indiana, North Dakota, and South Dakota are considering new laws deputizing private citizens to enforce abortion bans, and reproductive rights groups told Politico that they expect similar bills to be proposed in Arizona, South Carolina, and Ohio.
The laws could have the effect of intimidating providers out of offering abortion care and patients out of seeking care, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights.
“It creates a situation in which, even if the defendants were to win every single case, the burden of having to defend themselves, of getting attorneys, of having to go to around to rural courts across Texas’ 258 counties—that alone threatens to stop the provision of abortion across the state,” Marc Hearron, senior counsel with the organization, told Politico.
“The sooner anti-choice lawmakers act on this signal, the harder it will be for providers to survive the litigation wars to come,” tweeted journalist Jay Willis.
‘Tip of the Iceberg’: GOP-Led States Eye Texas Model to Attack Abortion Rights
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