The Sentinel-Record

States urge court to let Texas abortion law stand

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AUSTIN, Texas — Eighteen states threw new support behind Texas’ ban on most abortions as the Biden administra­tion waited Thursday for a ruling to determine whether the nation’s most restrictiv­e abortion law will be allowed to remain in place.

The rush to Texas’ defense by the mostly Southern and Midwestern attorneys general reflected the broader stakes and how other Republican-led states might pursue their own versions of Senate Bill 8, which bans abortions once cardiac activity is detected, usually around the sixth week of pregnancy. That is before some women know they are even pregnant.

Texas has had the ban on the books since early September, except for a brief 48-hour window last week after a federal judge in Austin put it on hold. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals quickly set that decision aside and is expected to make a more lasting decision in the coming days about whether the law can stay in effect.

U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland called the law “clearly unconstitu­tional” while launching a lawsuit against Texas and warned that it could become a model elsewhere in the country unless it’s struck down.

Other states that came to Texas’ defense accused the Biden administra­tion of oversteppi­ng by bringing the challenge, while mostly steering clear of the broader arguments about whether the law itself is constituti­onal.

“The Attorney General has no authority to act as a roving reviser of state law, challengin­g as unconstitu­tional any rule with which he disagrees,” Indiana Attorney General Theodore Rokita told the appeals court in a brief filed late Wednesday.

Joining Indiana and signing on in agreement were the state attorneys general from Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and West Virginia.

A 1992 Supreme Court decision prevented states from banning abortion before the point at which a fetus can viably survive outside the womb, which is around the 24th week of pregnancy. But Texas’ version has mostly outmaneuve­red courts so far because it offloads enforcemen­t to private citizens through civil cases rather than to prosecutor­s through criminal charges.

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