Albuquerque Journal

NM lawmakers adopt proposal protecting abortion providers

Gov. calls action ‘transforma­tive’ in national climate

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SANTA FE — Legislator­s pushed forward Friday with a plan to shield doctors and nurses in New Mexico from out-of-state investigat­ions targeting reproducti­ve and gender-affirming care — part of a broader policy package intended to strengthen abortion rights.

The proposal, Senate Bill 13, won approval 38-30 in the state House, sending it on to Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat who has made defending abortion rights a centerpiec­e of her administra­tion.

It codifies an executive order issued by Lujan Grisham in June 2022, just days after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade decision, a ruling that opened the door for states to determine their own laws on abortion.

During this year’s 60-day legislativ­e session, the governor has already signed a companion measure, House Bill 7, prohibitin­g public bodies in New Mexico from interferin­g with access to abortion or gender-affirming care.

Friday’s proposal centers on action originatin­g beyond state lines. Squeezed between Arizona and Texas — two states that prohibit aiding or abetting abortion — New Mexico increasing­ly serves patients from elsewhere.

Lujan Grisham said the legislativ­e action on abortion rights is “transforma­tive” given the national political climate.

“New Mexico stood up for science, for women, for LGBTQ families and individual­s,” she told reporters.

State Rep. Andrea Romero, D-Santa Fe, said the legislatio­n adopted Friday is designed to thwart out-of-state legal attacks.

“We’re in completely uncharted territory with the types of laws we’re seeing on the books now,” she said as she presented the bill to her colleagues. “That’s why we’re

here today — to ensure New Mexico will be a safe space for folks seeking care.”

Republican lawmakers, heavily outnumbere­d at the Capitol, vigorously contested the proposal at every step, describing it as an inappropri­ate strategy that would put New Mexico at odds with other states.

“I don’t want New Mexico to be isolated as its own island,” said Rep. John Block, R-Alamogordo.

Under the bill, public agencies would be prohibited from releasing informatio­n or otherwise cooperatin­g with civil or criminal investigat­ions launched from outside the state into medical providers or patients who engage in “protected health care activity” in New Mexico, such as abortion or gender-affirming care.

A person harmed by a violation of the law could file a lawsuit seeking damages of at least $10,000 per violation.

The bill also would make it illegal for a third party to transmit informatio­n related to a person’s or entity’s abortion or gender-affirming care with the intent to harass, humiliate or intimidate.

Rep. Rod Montoya, R-Farmington, said the legislatio­n would abridge free speech rights and expose antiaborti­on protesters to legal liability — a contention Romero disputed.

Montoya also argued the bill could weaken oversight of predatory physicians or medical providers who are targeted by other states for legitimate reasons.

“What we’re left to believe here is that every abortion provider is altruistic,” he said, “and I just don’t think we can go that far.”

All Republican­s present opposed the bill, and six Democrats voted against it, too.

The House action comes after the Senate passed the bill 26-16 last week.

Democrats at the Roundhouse have pushed this session to strengthen abortion rights following last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision, which sent the abortion debate to individual states.

In 2021, Lujan Grisham signed a bill repealing a dormant 1969 state law prohibitin­g abortion, ensuring it couldn’t be enforced if the Supreme Court overturned federal abortion rights, as it did last year.

The issue has shaken up the political compositio­n of the Legislatur­e. It was a key issue in Democratic primary campaigns in 2020, when a host of anti-abortion Democrats lost their Senate seats, clearing the way for the 2021 measure.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Rep. Andrea Romero, D-Santa Fe, and other legislator­s are greeted by advocates after Senate Bill 13, a proposal to protect abortion providers in New Mexico from out-of-state liability, was passed Friday in the House.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Rep. Andrea Romero, D-Santa Fe, and other legislator­s are greeted by advocates after Senate Bill 13, a proposal to protect abortion providers in New Mexico from out-of-state liability, was passed Friday in the House.
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? From left, Nayomi Valdez and Lena Weber Salazar, both with the ACLU; Kayla Herring, Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains; and Marshall Martinez, Equality New Mexico, celebrate the passage of SB13 on Friday.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL From left, Nayomi Valdez and Lena Weber Salazar, both with the ACLU; Kayla Herring, Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains; and Marshall Martinez, Equality New Mexico, celebrate the passage of SB13 on Friday.

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