The Phnom Penh Post

Another US state passes abortion law on providers

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ANOTHER US state passed a law allowing abortion providers to be sued in civil court on March 23, as conservati­ves across the country ramp up their effort to overturn long-held reproducti­ve rights.

The bill in Idaho allows families of women who have had abortions – and the father of the foetus – to sue providers, taking enforcemen­t out of the hands of the state, in a move modeled on a controvers­ial Texas law.

Governor Brad Little, who signed the bill on March 23, said he was an ardent supporter of the rights of “pre-born babies”, but feared this approach rendered the law unconstitu­tional.

“While I support the pro-life policy in this legislatio­n, I fear the novel civil enforcemen­t mechanism will in short order be proven both unconstitu­tional and unwise,” he wrote in a letter to the state legislatur­e.

“Deputising private citizens to levy hefty monetary fines on the exercise of a disfavoure­d but judicially recognised constituti­onal right for the purpose of evading court review undermines our constituti­onal form of government and weakens our collective liberties.”

As critics of the Texas law also pointed out, Little said framing legislatio­n in this way rendered vulnerable rights that conservati­ves hold dear, such as the right to own guns.

Civil rights groups and the White House lambasted the Idaho law.

“Lawmakers openly touted this bill as a ‘clever’ way to undermine abortion access by evading judicial review,” said Lauren Bramwell of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

“It is irresponsi­ble and politicall­y motivated governing that will harm real people who deserve to decide for themselves what is best for them and their families, without political interferen­ce.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the Texas bill and copycat initiative­s like the one in Idaho were a blatant attempt to undermine rights settled in the touchstone Roe vs Wade Supreme Court ruling that cemented

a woman’s right to abortion.

“This developmen­t is devastatin­g for women in Idaho, as it will further impede women’s access to healthcare, especially those on low incomes and living in rural communitie­s,” she said.

“Over the last six months, Texas [law] has had profoundly negative effects, with women forced to travel hundreds of miles to access care, and clinics in neighborin­g states seeing a significan­t increase in demand.”

Right-wing politician­s have launched a full-frontal assault on abortion, a deeply divisive issue in the US that is dear to their voters’ hearts.

A total of 1,844 provisions relating to sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights have been introduced in 46 US states during just the past twoand-a-half months, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which advocates for abortion rights.

Lawmakers in conservati­ve Republican-led

southern states have introduced bills tightening restrictio­ns on abortion, while their counterpar­ts in Democratic-ruled progressiv­e states have submitted measures protecting a woman’s right to choose.

The legislativ­e frenzy comes as the Supreme Court, dominated by conservati­ves following the nomination of three justices by former president Donald Trump, looks poised to re-examine the 1973 Roe vs Wade ruling.

 ?? AFP ?? Activists holding portraits of women who died because of the lack of legal right to abortion march on Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8 in Los Angeles, the US state of California.
AFP Activists holding portraits of women who died because of the lack of legal right to abortion march on Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8 in Los Angeles, the US state of California.

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