The Columbus Dispatch

Cities opposing Mississipp­i abortion ban

- Bill Bush

Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein, on behalf of the city and 28 other cities and counties nationwide, has filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in support of the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights’ challenge to a Mississipp­i law banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

Klein said the Mississipp­i law is in direct defiance of federal law establishe­d by the Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade. That 1973 landmark ruling held that women had a constituti­onal right to an abortion within the first six months of pregnancy, when the fetus is incapable of surviving outside the womb.

Ohio abortion-rights advocates have reason for great concern over the pending Supreme Court decision to hear arguments in December concerning the Mississipp­i law that will test all states’ ability to ban pre-viability abortions, Klein said.

Upending that long-settled law would be giving the green light to Ohio’s “regressive” Republican-controlled legislatur­e to outlaw abortion, he said.

“We should all be concerned about access to health care in a state like Ohio” if the Supreme Court upholds Mississipp­i’s abortion restrictio­n, Klein told The Dispatch Tuesday.

Some of the cities joining Columbus in the brief supporting abortion rights include Cincinnati, Dayton, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, New York, Oakland, Portland, Saint Paul, San Francisco, and Seattle.

Klein’s amicus, or “friend of the court” brief focuses largely on the argument that affluent women will continue to be able to get abortions by traveling to other states, while poor and mostly Black women will lose all realistic access, “worsening negative health outcomes and economic vulnerabil­ities” that municipal health department­s fight to eradicate.

“Such an outcome would work at cross-purposes to the crucial efforts undertaken by local government­s nationwide to combat endemic disparitie­s in our public health system,” the brief states.

Michael Gonidakis, president of Ohio Right to Life, agrees that big changes are coming to the Ohio abortion landscape if the U.S. Supreme Court upholds the Mississipp­i law, and he believes it will do so by a 5-4 vote.

“This is the best, most pro-life court we’ve had in a generation,” Gonidakis said. “...Most likely what’s going to happen is they’re going to say the Mississipp­i law stands, so Roe v. Wade is overturned,” a ruling likely to arrive next summer.

If that happens, “it’s definitely going to have some sort of impact on cases going in Ohio,” said Jessie Hill, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University and former attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union.

Earlier this year, a federal judge extended a temporary stay on Ohio’s 2019 “heartbeat” abortion ban, meaning the law signed in April 2019 by Republican Gov. Mike Dewine, a staunch pro-life advocate, will remain on hold. That law prohibits abortions after the first detectable fetal heartbeat, or as early as six weeks into pregnancy — before many women even know they are pregnant.

Depending on what the Supreme Court says either way, “it could definitely have an affect on the six-week heartbeat bill,” Hill said.

Gonidakis says his group plans to have a “trigger bill,” automatica­lly banning all abortions in Ohio if Roe gets overturned, on Dewine’s desk by Christmas, ahead of the justices’ decision. “We have super-veto-proof majorities in the (Ohio) House and Senate,” he said, adding that Dewine is a personal friend and supporter.

The fact that the U.S. Supreme Court is even hearing arguments, combined with its decision earlier this month to refuse to grant a temporary injunction immediatel­y blocking a new Texas law prohibitin­g most abortions, “is not a good sign,” said Kellie Copeland, executive director of NARAL Pro-choice Ohio, which supports access to abortion care, birth control, paid parental leave, and protection­s against pregnancy discrimina­tion.

“Wealthy people, they’ll flee the state to get the care that they need,” Copeland said. “But what happens to the rest of us?”

Minorities “will be under extreme scrutiny, and be criminaliz­ed at rates much higher than white folks will be,” Copeland said.

“Politician­s opposed to abortion have been working for decades to shift the balance of the court for just this moment: the opportunit­y to overturn 50 years of precedent under Roe v. Wade and end access to safe, legal abortion,” Aileen Day, communicat­ion director of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Ohio, said in an email. wbush@gannett.com @Reproterbu­sh

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