Texarkana Gazette

New Texas abortion law is already saving lives

- Cynthia Allen TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

FORT WORTH — Last Wednesday, Lila Rose, the founder of anti-abortion group Live Action, euphorical­ly tweeted, “It’s a beautiful day in Texas, which is on its way to being abortion-free.”

Her statement was hyperbolic, but only slightly.

On Sept. 1, Texas’ fetal heartbeat law took effect, exposing anyone who assists in the procuremen­t of an abortion after the unborn child’s heartbeat is detected (with the exception of the pregnant woman, who is explicitly protected) to civil liability.

Effectivel­y, this prohibits abortions at or beyond six weeks of pregnancy (when the majority of abortions occur), except in cases of medical emergency.

Texas’ law has not been blocked by the courts, in no small part due to its unusual constructi­on.

It relies on private citizens instead of state actors to enforce abortion restrictio­ns. The legal concept is not new — it’s used in instances of Medicaid fraud, for example — but unique in this area of the law.

Chelsey Youman, Texas state director of the anti-abortion group the Human Coalition, says this approach offers a meaningful way for society to engage in the cause of protecting innocent life.

But the mechanism has a practical applicatio­n, too.

For years, abortion providers have been successful at blocking convention­al attempts to regulate doctors and clinics — like establishi­ng certain standards of care — by cherry-picking courts willing to find that almost any regulation on abortion constitute­s an undue burden. This usually happens well before the law is even enforced.

But because the Texas law empowers private individual­s to sue those who “aid and abet” in an abortion only after one has occurred, it cleverly denies the law’s opponents any chance of legal success on a pre-enforcemen­t challenge. It exposes anyone providing an abortion after the law’s enactment to financial penalties and potentiall­y even loss of licenses.

It’s why the law’s challenger­s have had such difficulty getting a court to stop it, and why their bizarre eleventh-hour appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court was summarily and rightly dismissed on procedural grounds.

It’s also why the law actually works.

But the celebratio­n can be only momentary. Great victory requires great responsibi­lity.

And as the influx in calls to organizati­ons that seek to help women through — and not out of — crisis pregnancie­s suggests, the work is now really beginning.

There is good news there, too.

In states like Texas, a vast and often underappre­ciated network of nonprofits, clinics, church groups and medical profession­als have already been serving women for years.

Youman said the state now spends $100 million on abortion-alternativ­e services including medical care, counseling and other forms of assistance. The Human Coalition has a network of 2,700 clinics around the country, outnumberi­ng abortion clinics 20:1.

Youman says that three-quarters of the women walking into her group’s clinics admit that if they had other options or assistance, they would much prefer to parent their unplanned children.

“We seek to understand and love the women and their children,” she said.

For these organizati­ons, whose work it is to come alongside women in crisis and to help stabilize their circumstan­ces, the mission (at least in Texas) has become that much bigger.

If and, hopefully, when Roe v. Wade is overturned and regulation of abortion is returned to the states, anti-abortion groups will again need to redouble their efforts.

But today, the new law will save the lives of an estimated 150 children in Texas.

That is reason enough for celebratio­n and a reminder that this is where the pro-life cause begins in earnest.

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