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Texas case shows abortion ban exemptions are a sham

- Michelle Goldberg is a journalist, author, and an oped columnist for The New York Times.

Soon after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year, horror stories started emerging of women denied medically urgent abortions for pregnancie­s gone dangerousl­y awry. In response, the anti-abortion movement developed a sort of conspiracy theory to rationaliz­e away the results of their policies.

Pro-choice activists, they argued, were deliberate­ly misconstru­ing abortion laws, leading doctors to refuse to treat women who obviously qualified for exceptions. “Abortion advocates are spreading the dangerous lie that lifesaving care is not or may not be permitted in these states, leading to provider confusion and poor outcomes for women,” said a report by the anti-abortion Charlotte Lozier Institute. Catholic conservati­ve Richard Doerflinge­r accused “pro-abortion groups” of spreading “false and exaggerate­d claims in order to ‘paralyze’ physicians and discredit the laws.”

Whether this argument stemmed from genuine denial or a cynical desire to mislead the public, a shattering case in Texas shows how absurd it is. Late last month, Kate Cox, a 31-yearold mother of two, learned that her latest, muchwanted pregnancy was doomed due to a severe genetic disorder . ...

Her doctor told her that carrying the pregnancy to term could jeopardize her future fertility, and Cox very much wants more children. So she, her husband and her doctor sued the state, seeking a court order to allow her to terminate her pregnancy in Texas. If the Texas abortion ban had workable medical exceptions, it’s hard to see how they wouldn’t apply to Cox. But it doesn’t, and the state attorney general, Ken Paxton, fought the Cox family and their doctor every step of the way.

This case is unusual for Cox’s willingnes­s to wage a legal fight while suffering a medical catastroph­e, but not for the cruel bind the state placed her in. The day Cox received the terrible news about her fetus, the Texas Supreme Court was hearing oral arguments in Zurawski v. Texas, a suit brought by two doctors and 20 women who had been denied medically necessary abortions and were seeking to clarify the scope of emergency exemptions to the state’s ban. Among the plaintiffs is Amanda Zurawski, who was 18 weeks pregnant after a year and half of fertility treatments when her water broke. Although her pregnancy had no chance of surviving, she was denied an abortion until she became septic. Zurawski ended up spending days in an intensive care unit and has been left with damage to her reproducti­ve tract that will most likely make it harder for her to become pregnant again.

Turning to Google in the midst of her own crisis, Cox learned about the Zurawski case and got in touch with the legal organizati­on representi­ng the 20 women, the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights. That group quickly filed suit on her behalf, and last week, a Texas judge sided with Cox, issuing a temporary restrainin­g order that would have allowed her doctor to end the pregnancy without facing criminal or civil penalties. But Paxton appealed the order and warned three hospitals where Cox’s doctor holds admitting privileges not to let the abortion go forward . ...

In desperatio­n, Cox finally traveled out of state for an abortion, though the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights is not disclosing where she went . ...

As Molly Duane, the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights attorney representi­ng Cox, points out, abortion procedures at 15 weeks of pregnancy or later are generally done over two days, with patients sent home in between. Most people would rather not endure this process in a hotel room. “Truly, she just wanted to get health care in Texas,” Duane said Friday. But she couldn’t. Late Monday, the Texas Supreme Court declared that Cox wasn’t entitled to an abortion and vacated the lower court’s order . ...

An irony here is that if the state Supreme Court had allowed Cox to end her pregnancy in Texas, it might have benefited hardline opponents of abortion . ...

But right-wing politician­s and those who support them would rather inflict unimaginab­le suffering on women than relax the tiniest bit of control over their medical decisions. I asked Duane if any anti-abortion groups had filed amicus briefs on Cox’s behalf. I wasn’t surprised that the answer was no.

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Michelle Goldberg

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