Texas Attorney General Appeals Judge’s Ruling, Abortion Ban Will Keep Saving Babies
After a liberal state judge issued a ruling that weakens the Texas abortion ban and opens the door for killing disabled babies in abortions and making it easier to justify elective abortions as emergencies, the Texas Attorney General’s Office filed a motion in the Texas Supreme Court appealing the ruling.
The good news for mothers and babies is this action effectively blocks the injunction and allows the exception language approved by the legislature in the abortion ban to remain in effect. That means the Texas abortion ban will keep saving babies from abortions as much as possible.
As LifeNews reported, radical abortion activists are not happy with the Texas abortion ban that has already saved as many as 20,000 babies or more from abortions. They have been using a handful of extremely rare cases in a desperate attempt to make it easier to kill babies in abortions just because they’re disabled or just because mothers may have a medical emergency or severe medical issue.
Every Pro-Life law that Texas has passed over the years includes explicit language clarifying that intervention is allowed when the mother’s life or major bodily function is at stake. The same is true with the recent Texas Heartbeat Act (Senate Bill 8; 87R) and the Trigger Law (House Bill 1280; 87R), which together outlaw all elective abortion in the state of Texas except for these legitimate medical emergencies for pregnant women.
Late Friday, Judge Jessica Mangrum issued a ruling in Zurawski v. State of Texas, a lawsuit brought by the pro-abortion Center for Reproductive Rights on behalf of 13 women and two abortionists. These women believe they qualified for a medically necessary abortion, but were denied or never offered one, and the doctors claim they are confused or hindered from providing proper care due to the state’s Pro-Life laws.
Those who are bringing the lawsuit are seeking a temporary injunction from the judge to “clarify” the medical exemptions in the Texas abortion ban.
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Mangrum issued a ruling siding with the abortion activists. She wrote she agreed the women were “delayed or denied access to abortion care because of the widespread uncertainty regarding physicians’ level of discretion under the medical exception to Texas’s abortion bans.” She ordered that abortionists not be prosecuted for doing abortions “in good faith” that they think qualify under the exceptions.
Her temporary injunction significantly alters the Texas abortion ban — essentially rewriting the law so doctors themselves can determine what counts as a medical emergency, including when a prenatal diagnosis claims the unborn baby is disabled.
A leading Texas pro-life group applauded the AGs office for responding quickly and appealing the ruling.
“We applaud the swift action of the Texas Attorney General’s office to defend Texas law, which protects the lives of unborn babies while allowing abortions in rare cases when abortion is necessary to save the pregnant woman’s life,” said Texas Alliance for Life Communications Director Amy O’Donnell. “While Texas law is clear, we believe that some doctors are not apprised of the actual language of the law, resulting in poor care for their patients. Professional organizations like the Texas Medical Association, ACOG, and the Texas Medical Board, are the proper sources of guidance and rules for physicians, not the courts. Judicial activism from the bench using non-medically defined terms opens the door for greater confusion.”
In August 2022, the Human Life Protection Act went into effect, protecting unborn babies from abortion beginning at conception. That law allows a physician to perform an abortion to save a mother’s life, when “in the exercise of reasonable medical judgment, the pregnant female . . . has a life-threatening physical condition aggravated by, caused by, or arising from a pregnancy that places the female at risk of death or poses a serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function unless the abortion is performed or induced.”
Nothing requires a woman’s death to be imminent, or her unborn baby’s heart to stop beating before an abortion can be performed to save a woman’s life.
The exception language in Texas Human Life Protect Act is the same as in a 2013 law to protect unborn babies from abortion beginning at 20 weeks. Since then, no physician has ever been prosecuted for performing abortions to save the mother’s life under the pre-Roe laws, the 20-week law, and the Human Life Protection Act.
A witness in defense of Texas law, Ingrid Skop, M.D., explains in this video released by Texas Alliance for Life that the law clearly allows prompt abortions when necessary to save the mother’s life.
Texas Right to Life says the ruling, if ultimately upheld, would have radical pro-abortion ramifications.
“Anti-Life activist groups are weaponizing the language meant to protect mothers. Of course, their goal is to get abortion back in full force. In order to do so, they intentionally and maliciously misrepresent the medical allowance in our law, blasting their lies all over the media. This seems to have left doctors afraid to intervene even to save a mother’s life,” it said.
“As Texas Right to Life and our Pro-Life friends have been saying since the laws first passed, our language is clear that procedures done to save a mother’s life are already not subject to the penalties of the law for performing an illegal abortion. Mothers do not have to be imminently dying in order to receive care. The fact that they sometimes are denied is not a shortcoming of the law, but a result of lies and deception,” it added.
The pro-life group continued:
The plaintiffs in this case generally belong to two categories. The first are those who had genuine medical emergencies, but their doctors wrongfully waited to intervene until they were on death’s door. These women claimed that their doctors were too scared to act until it was almost too late due to the state’s laws, even though the doctors knew for certain their condition would progress to critical.
The second category is women whose children were given a life-limiting diagnosis. Many of these children had anencephaly, a condition where the brain and skull do not properly form in the womb. Children with anencephaly will pass away in the womb, during birth, or shortly after birth. While these cases are undeniably tragic and the pregnancies can be high-risk, they do not necessarily fall into the same category as when the mother’s life is at risk.
These children and their families deserve compassion and love. But the plaintiffs are arguing that these cases are the same as the first category, due to the emotional distress that the mothers had to endure by carrying these children who they knew would not live long. They would like to see these cases, where the child is given a life-limiting diagnosis but is still alive, subject to abortion under the medical emergency definition of our law.
Texas Right to Life says the ruling would have the effect of broadening the law rather than clarifying it, a role that is the proper jurisdiction of the Legislature, not the judiciary.
Dr. Ingrid Skop, a practicing obstetrician-gynecologist of 25 years, testified at the hearing of her firsthand experience that Texas law can be clearly applied as written. She pointed out that doctors in Texas have been practicing without confusion until now. They have been following the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (a federal law which requires abortions to be offered in cases when the mothers life or “a major bodily function” are at risk) for the past 40 years and the state’s medical emergency laws for the past 100 years.
Dr. Skop also revealed that doctors who are confused about the law are only relying on false information being circulated by the media. “I think it is clear that the Texas law allows treatment of life-threatening conditions,” Dr. Skop told the court, “it is not the law’s fault.”
In its arguments in court, Texas officials that these doctors have not read the law, and are thus under-informed. Also, the regulatory bodies that typically offer guidance, such as the Texas Medical Board, have remained eerily silent on the issue.
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