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Abortion-rights groups take up the fight in the United States

The battle over abortion shifted to the states Monday as a weekend of furious protest and prayerful thanksgiving in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade reversal gave way to a coast-to-coast wave of lawsuits, legislation and pitched political fights.
With conservatives in roughly half of the states moving swiftly to end or dramatically restrict reproductive rights, and liberals in about 20 more scrambling to preserve them, the national debate suddenly fragmented into a contentious patchwork, with lawyers and lawmakers dissecting state constitutions and statutes after Friday’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.
“It’s all about the states from here on out,” said Jessie Hill, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University who has worked on abortion rights cases. “We can fantasize about federal solutions to this issue or nationwide settlements of the abortion question, but I think that after Dobbs, I don’t see a lot of possibilities at the federal level.”

Abortion rights advocates in Kentucky, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas on Monday sued to halt or delay bans on abortion after a similar court challenge was filed in Arizona over the weekend. Planned Parenthood South Atlantic moved to withdraw a federal court challenge to a ban in South Carolina, but apparently only so the organization could file a fresh challenge in state courts.
To understand why, one need only to look at Louisiana and Utah, where judges Monday temporarily blocked enforcement of laws that would have banned abortion. Abortion rights advocates are coalescing around a strategy of asking courts for temporary injunctions that at the very least can allow abortions to proceed in the short term. One of Louisiana’s three clinics already said Monday that it would reopen.
Abortion rights supporters protest outside the Supreme Court in Washington on Monday, June 27, 2022. (The New York Times)
Although the actions with the most immediate potential impacts occurred in states with bans or restrictions, states that support abortion rights moved on Monday to shore up their protections. In California, a supermajority of state lawmakers placed a constitutional amendment on the November ballot to explicitly protect abortion rights for the state’s 40 million people. In Washington, Gov. Jay Inslee said he would pursue a change in that state’s constitution to make abortion rights permanent.
In states trying to ban abortions, the legal battles are accelerating.
Hill is part of a team of lawyers challenging in federal court an Ohio law that bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. A judge allowed that law to take effect after the Supreme Court ruling. But Hill said she believed that protections for individual rights in the Ohio Constitution could make for a compelling argument that abortion is protected in the state.

In Florida, providers Monday deployed similar arguments in a court hearing, contending that privacy rights in the state constitution preempted a new state ban on the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The Louisiana drict court temporarily blocked so-called trigger laws that would have criminalized nearly all abortions after health providers argued that the bans were unenforceable and vague and violated the state constitution. In Utah, the judge said he would temporarily block enforcement of an abortion ban in that state.
“There is irreparable harm that has been shown,” Judge Andrew Stone said while issuing a temporary restraining order that will be in effect for two weeks. Lawyers for a clinic that sought the order said they had 28 women awaiting an abortion appointment Monday.
But even as lawsuits were filed, opponents of abortion moved to introduce restrictions. In Mississippi, the state attorney general officially recognized the Supreme Court’s ruling, starting a 10-day clock after which almost all abortions will be prohibited. In South Carolina, a measure banning abortion at about six weeks of pregnancy appeared likely to take effect after an abortion provider asked a federal judge to withdraw a lawsuit that had blocked the law from taking effect. And in Indiana, the attorney general asked courts to allow the state to enforce several laws, including one banning abortions sought because of race, sex or disability.
Anti-abortion advocates pray as they demonstrate outside the Supreme Court in Washington on Monday, June 27, 2022. (The New York Times)
“I believe in building a culture of life in Indiana,” Attorney General Todd Rokita said in a statement. “That means protecting the lives of unborn babies and safeguarding the physical, mental and emotional well-being of their mothers.”
As states absorbed the end of a half-century-old set of reproductive rights that had been guaranteed the US Constitution, the most striking impact was the pace with which it intensified already widening political fissures.
On Monday, attorneys general in 21 states and the Drict of Columbia issued a joint statement reassuring out-of-state patients that they would protect their access to abortion. The represented states included New Mexico, North Carolina and Minnesota, which could see more patients from near states with abortion bans.

That comes after attorneys general in 19 other states last week jointly asked the US Justice Department to protect anti-abortion organizations from violence. Among the states represented were Florida, Ohio and Texas.
Brigitte Amiri, a deputy director of the Reproductive Freedom Project at the American Civil Liberties Union, warned that court challenges, while important, were not a panacea for abortion-rights supporters. Even in places where they find relief in trial courts, they face a difficult long-term legal and political landscape.
The state Supreme Courts in many places with restrictive abortion laws are dominated justices who are Republicans or were appointed Republicans. And even if certain abortion restrictions are deemed unenforceable, legislatures can try to pass new laws and voters can seek to amend their state constitutions.
“Like we’ve often said, the courts are not going to be able to save us,” Amiri said. “That was true even when Roe was the law of the land — that you needed all the tools in the toolbox then. But I think even more so now. We have to diversify what we’re doing in terms of trying to ensure abortion access.”

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