Springfield News-Sun

Republican­s are turning activists into enforcers

- Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg writes for The New York Times.

A Texas law banning most abortions went into effect Wednesday. By refusing to act on an emergency petition that would have blocked it, the Supreme Court did not overturn Roe v. Wade, but it rendered that precedent, at least for the time being, irrelevant.

There’s a sinister brilliance to the way this whole thing has gone down. Texas fashioned an abortion prohibitio­n whose bizarre, crowdsourc­ed enforcemen­t mechanism gave conservati­ve courts a pretext not to enjoin it despite its conflict with Roe. And the Supreme Court has made Roe momentaril­y useless without sparking the nationwide convulsion that would have come from overturnin­g it outright.

The Texas law, known as Senate Bill 8, is now likely to be copied by conservati­ve states across the country. As long as it stands, abortion in Texas is illegal after a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually around the sixth week of pregnancy, or about two weeks after a missed period. There is no exception for rape or incest.

But perhaps the most shocking thing about SB 8 is the power it gives abortion opponents — or simple opportunis­ts — over their fellow citizens. The law is written so that they, not the police or prosecutor­s, get to enforce it, and poten- tially profit off it. Under SB 8, any private citizen can sue others for “conduct that aids or abets the performanc­e or inducement of an abortion.”

Pregnant women themselves are exempt, but anyone who helps them, including clinic staff, friends and family, nonprofits that help fund abortions, and even taxi drivers can be held liable. If the people who file lawsuits win, they’re entitled to attorney’s fees and at least $10,000. If they lose, they’re out nothing but whatever it cost to bring the suits, because defendants can’t recoup their attorney’s fees.

The law’s procedural trickery has so far kept it from being enjoined, though the Supreme Court could still decide to act. As legal journalist­s Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern wrote in Slate, “Typically, when a state restricts abortion, providers file a lawsuit in federal court against the state officials responsibl­e for enforcing the new law. Here, however, there are no such officials: The law is enforced by individual anti-abortion activists.” It is, they wrote, “an Escher staircase for litigators.”

It is also an outgrowth of a Republican Party that increasing­ly encourages vigilantis­m.

Today’s GOP made a hero out of Kyle Rittenhous­e, the young man charged with killing two people during protests against police violence in

Kenosha, Wisconsin. Leading Republican­s speak of the Jan. 6 insurgents, who tried to stop the certificat­ion of an election, as martyrs and political prisoners.

Last year, Sen. Marco Rubio praised Texas Trump supporters who swarmed a Biden campaign bus, allegedly trying to run it off the road: “We love what they did,” he said. This weekend in Pennsylvan­ia, Steve Lynch, the Republican nominee in a county executive race, said of school boards that impose mask mandates, “I’m going in with 20 strong men” to tell them “they can leave or they can be removed.” ...

“People are afraid,” Amy Hagstrom Miller, Whole Woman’s Health’s president and CEO, told me about SB 8. “... They’re unfortunat­ely kind of used to the picketers screaming at them and writing down their license plates. But now these folks have this whole tool chest full of ways that they can harass them.”

Even if SB 8 is eventually knocked down, it’s already sent a message about who the Republican Party intends to put in charge of the rest of us.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States