Orlando Sentinel

Looming abortion ban makes Florida relevant again, immediatel­y

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Florida’s sweeping new six-week abortion ban will be one of the worst things ever to happen to women in this state.

But paradoxica­lly, it might also be one of the best things to happen to democracy in Florida.

The Florida Supreme Court on Monday upheld a 2022 state law that prohibits abortion after 15 weeks, ruling that the right to an abortion is not protected by the privacy clause in the state Constituti­on.

The conservati­ve court’s 6-1 decision triggers a much more restrictiv­e six-week ban that the state Legislatur­e passed last year and that Gov. Ron DeSantis signed in a closed-door ceremony as he ramped up what became a disastrous campaign for president.

DeSantis’ weird late-night secrecy signaled that he knew he was on shaky ground, and sure enough, some of his richest campaign contributo­rs soon expressed doubts about such a brutal attack against women’s reproducti­ve rights.

The six-week ban, which takes effect in 30 days, is in line with other extreme anti-abortion laws in other Southern states, and makes abortion virtually illegal in the entire southeaste­rn U.S.

Forced to flee Florida

Many women are not even aware they are pregnant after six weeks, and those who are will be forced to flee Florida’s cruelly life-threatenin­g restrictio­ns to the Northeast or Midwest for medical care.

But the same court that imposed this highly repressive six-week ban on Florida also gave its approval to a statewide ballot initiative that asks voters to restore abortion rights up to the point of viability, or until 24 weeks of pregnancy.

Passage of Amendment 4 on the statewide ballot on Nov. 5 would invalidate the six-week abortion ban. A powerful and timely argument in favor of passing Amendment 4 is to repeal the six-week ban that is so punitive, even some Republican legislator­s in Florida refused to vote for it.

The six-week ban passed the Florida Senate, 26-13, and the House, 70-40.

Roll call votes show that the opponents included Republican­s who rarely stray from the party line. But they will be running for office this fall. This is one vote they won’t have trouble explaining to voters.

An altered political landscape

So, on a single tumultuous day in Florida, the Supreme Court imposed a brutal abortion ban and simultaneo­usly gave voters the power to repeal it. In so doing, the court may have dramatical­ly transforme­d the political landscape of the nation’s third-largest state.

“Make no mistake, Florida is not an easy state to win,” President Joe Biden’s campaign manager wrote in a memo that described an “opening” that did not exist before the court’s decisions. “But it is a winnable one for President Biden, especially given Trump’s weak, cash-strapped campaign, and serious vulnerabil­ities within his coalition.”

In contrast to the Democrats’ newfound sense of hope, Republican­s were strangely silent after the court rulings came down.

DeSantis, who usually has an opinion on just about any subject, said nothing.

Not a word from the governor who appointed five of the justices who upheld the six-week abortion ban he signed in secret.

Nor has there been a word from Sen. Rick Scott, who has said he would have signed the six-week abortion ban had he been governor, and who could now face a much tougher re-election challenge from Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.

There was more silence from the Republican­s in the Florida congressio­nal delegation. It’s no coincidenc­e.

Galvanizin­g voters

The abortion rights question is certain to galvanize voters, many of whom are more likely to vote Democratic. This issue is to Republican­s as immigratio­n is to Democrats, meaning it’s potentiall­y very damaging at the ballot box.

Polls show strong bipartisan support for abortion rights in Florida, despite the rightward drift of the state’s politics in recent years and the dramatic surge in Republican voter registrati­on.

A poll conducted by the University of North Florida last November showed 62% of voters favored Amendment 4, with a majority of Republican­s (53%) and independen­ts (58%) in support.

The amendment must win support from more than 60% of voters to be enshrined in the state Constituti­on.

Abortion will be on the ballot and nothing can change that, and this may yet be the most intense ballot initiative fight in Florida history. Voters also will decide on Amendment 3, whether to legalize recreation­al marijuana use.

In both cases, justices soundly rejected the tortured legal arguments of Attorney General Ashley Moody, who wanted both initiative­s kicked off the ballot (and who is considered a possible candidate for governor in 2026).

In a court filing, Moody called the wording of the abortion initiative a “trick” designed to “hoodwink” voters. Her legal defeats are clear victories for direct democracy.

The final decisions are in the hands of voters, where they belong.

All of a sudden, Florida is relevant again.

The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board includes Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson, Opinion Editor Krys Fluker and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney, editorial writer Martin Dyckman and Anderson. Send letters to insight@orlandosen­tinel.com.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a six-week abortion ban in private in his office on April 13, 2023.
COURTESY Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a six-week abortion ban in private in his office on April 13, 2023.

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