The Guardian (USA)

Supreme court declines to speed challenge to Texas abortion limits

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In the latest setback for abortion rights in Texas, the supreme court on Thursday refused to speed up the court case challengin­g the state’s ban on most abortions.

Over dissents from the three liberal justices, the court declined to order a federal appeals court to return the case to a federal judge who had temporaril­y blocked the law’s enforcemen­t. The court offered no explanatio­n for its action.

The Texas ban is thus likely to remain in effect for the foreseeabl­e future, following a decision by the fifth

UScircuit court of appeals in New Orleans to send the case to the Texas supreme court, which is entirely controlled by Republican justices and does not have to act immediatel­y.

Abortion providers had asked the high court to counterman­d the appellate order, which they said in court papers has no purpose other than to delay legal proceeding­s and prevent clinics from offering abortions beyond approximat­ely six weeks of pregnancy.

The law has devastated abortion care in Texas, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote. “Instead of stopping a Fifth Circuit panel from indulging Texas’ newest delay tactics, the Court allows the State yet again to extend the deprivatio­n of the federal constituti­onal rights of its citizens through procedural manipulati­on,” Sotomayor wrote, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan. “The Court may look the other way, but I cannot.”

Chief Justice John Roberts joined the three liberals in December in a dissent that called for allowing a broader challenge to the law and a quick return to the lower federal court. Roberts did not note his position on Thursday.

Clinics fear that their challenge to the law might not be resolved before the justices rule in a Mississipp­i case that could roll back abortion

rights across the country. That decision, which could overrule the landmark Roe v Wade case from 1973, is expected by late June.

The Texas law that bans abortion once cardiac activity is detected, usually at about six weeks – before some women know they are pregnant – has been in effect since September. Last month, the high court kept the law in place and allowed only a narrow challenge against the restrictio­ns to proceed.

The providers thought their best chance for a favorable outcome was before US District Judge Robert Pitman in Austin. Pitman issued an order in October blocking the law, though the appeals court put his ruling on hold just a couple of days later.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? The three liberals on the court dissented in Thursday’s ruling. Photograph: Daniel Slim/
AFP/Getty Images The three liberals on the court dissented in Thursday’s ruling. Photograph: Daniel Slim/

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