Texas Supreme Court Decision Means Abortion Ban Challenge Will Be Thrown Out
Scores of Texans have been denied abortion care in the state since the U.S. Supreme Court let the law take effect on September 1
AUSTIN, Texas 鈥 Today, the Texas Supreme Court that Whole Woman鈥檚 Health v. Jackson 鈥 once the most promising lawsuit against Texas鈥 ban on abortion after six weeks of pregnancy (SB 8) 鈥 cannot proceed against the Texas Medical Board and other similar state licensing officials, the only remaining defendants in that challenge. This ruling comes after the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed most of the case in December 2021, allowing only a small part of the case to move forward in lower court. Today鈥檚 ruling will result in dismissal of the remaining portion of the challenge to the six-week ban, meaning SB 8 will likely remain in effect for the foreseeable future.
The case was filed in July 2021 by abortion providers, funds, and other advocates in Texas seeking to block SB 8. Since then, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to block the ban numerous times and finally dismissed most of the case three months ago, ruling that federal courts are powerless to block this kind of citizen-enforced law despite its blatant attack on established constitutional rights. The only part of the case that was allowed to move forward was against the Texas Medical Board and other state licensing officials, seeking to prevent them from taking disciplinary actions against doctors and other health professionals who provide abortion care in violation of SB 8. Today, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that these officials do not have the authority to revoke licenses for violations of SB 8, leaving no other defendants against which the case can proceed. The ban remains in place, including the bounty-hunting scheme, which puts a $10,000 bounty on the head of anyone who provides an abortion after six weeks of pregnancy or helps someone obtain an abortion past that point.
Clinics in neighboring states have reported huge upticks in Texas patients since SB 8 took effect, resulting in weeks-long wait times. At Hope Medical Group 鈥 an abortion clinic in Louisiana 鈥 64 percent of their current patients are Texas residents. Planned Parenthood data in February showing that, in the first four months after SB 8 took effect, more than half of the patients at their Oklahoma health centers were from Texas, compared to less than 10 percent in the prior year. Many other Texans have been unable to travel out of state and have been forced to carry their pregnancies to term or attempt to manage an abortion on their own. The impact has fallen鈥痟ardest on marginalized communities, including people living on low incomes, and Black and Brown communities.
Already this year, 10 states have introduced bills copying SB 8. In Oklahoma, the legislature is expected to pass a copycat bill by the end of the month, which has an immediate effective date. That means by the end of March, abortion may be banned after 6 weeks in Oklahoma 鈥 a state where many Texans have been traveling to find abortion services. Other states that have introduced copycat bills include: Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Idaho, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin.
The plaintiffs in Whole Woman鈥檚 Health v. Jackson鈥痠nclude Whole Woman鈥檚 Health; Whole Woman鈥檚 Health Alliance; 11 Planned Parenthood health centers throughout the state; Southwestern Women鈥檚 Surgical Center; Austin Women鈥檚 Health Center; Alamo Women鈥檚 Reproductive Services; Houston Women鈥檚 Reproductive Services; Dr. Allison Gilbert and Dr. Bhavik Kumar, who provide abortion services; Rev. Erika Forbes and Rev. Daniel Kanter, who provide emotional and spiritual counseling and support to patients considering abortion; the Afiya Center; Frontera Fund; Fund Texas Choice (FTC); Jane鈥檚 Due Process; Lilith Fund; the TEA Fund; and Marva Sadler, senior director of clinical services at Whole Woman鈥檚 Health.
Plaintiffs are represented by鈥痶he 鈥,,鈥痶丑别鈥, the鈥老澳门开奖结果, the鈥,鈥疢orrison & Foerster LLP, and Austin attorney Christen Mason Hebert.
A timeline of Whole Woman鈥檚 Health v. Jackson is available.
Quotes from plaintiffs and litigators:鈥
Statement from Julia Kaye, staff attorney, 老澳门开奖结果 Reproductive Freedom Project:
鈥淭he courts have once again failed Texans. This is another devastating injustice, and people will continue to be denied the basic human dignity of being able to control their own body. Some have been able to overcome this cruel law through the extraordinary support of abortion funds and the reproductive rights and justice movement to get abortion care very early in Texas or travel out of state. But too many others have been denied abortion care altogether, and the brunt of this horrific law has fallen on the most marginalized people, including people of color and people with the fewest resources. The public cannot stand by while extremist politicians and cowardly courts strip away our civil rights. We won鈥檛 stop fighting and we will do everything we can to stem the suffering that has resulted from this unprecedented crisis.鈥
Statement from Blair Wallace, policy & advocacy strategist, 老澳门开奖结果 of Texas:
鈥By dismissing our case and allowing overzealous politicians to win in their gambit to override the U.S. Constitution, the Texas Supreme Court ignored what is happening in its backyard. Every day, Texans, especially Black and Latinx Texans, are bearing the physical and mental health risks of being forced to carry a pregnancy to term against their will. And every day, in Texas, the Constitution鈥檚 promise to protect us from these harms has been made meaningless. But we will never stop fighting in the streets and at the legislature for the justice and compassion so sorely lacking in SB 8 and in the shameful judicial decisions upholding it.鈥
Statement from Amy Hagstrom Miller, president and CEO of Whole Woman鈥檚 Health and Whole Woman鈥檚 Health Alliance:
鈥淲e have been fighting this ban for six long months, but the courts have failed us. All the while, our Texas clinics have been open 鈥 and that is a testament to the commitment and resilience of our staff and doctors. This ban does not change the need for abortion in Texas, it just blocks people from accessing the care they need. The situation is becoming increasingly dire, and now neighboring states 鈥 where we have been sending patients 鈥 are about to pass similar bans. Where will Texans go then? The more states that pass these bans, the harder it will be for anyone in this region to get abortion care. Texans deserve better.鈥
Statement from Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights:
鈥淲e are in a moment of crisis not only for reproductive rights but for our justice system and the rule of law. With this ruling, the sliver of this case that we were left with is gone. An unconstitutional ban on abortion after six weeks continues unchecked in the state of Texas. The courts have allowed Texas to nullify a constitutional right. We will continue to do everything in our power to right this wrong.鈥
Statement from Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America:
鈥淭oday is a devastating day for people in Texas and anyone who believes in the right to control their own body, life, and future. Over and over again the courts have failed Texans, who have been stripped of their fundamental right to abortion for more than six months now. Because of the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 repeated refusal to intervene for more than half a year, Texans are living in a state of sustained chaos, crisis, and confusion 鈥 and there is no end in sight. Tragically, this attack on reproductive freedom now continues uninterrupted in Texas and across the country. Politicians have the green light to move forward with their own unconstitutional abortion bans, decimating access to abortion state by state, region by region. We are already seeing these attacks in Idaho, Florida, Arizona, Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, West Virginia, and more states. Our patients and providers deserve so much better. Everyone 鈥 no matter where you live or how much money you make 鈥 deserves access to essential health care, free of barriers or political roadblocks.鈥
Statement from Rupali Sharma, senior counsel and project director at the Lawyering Project:
鈥淔or over half a year, SB 8 has forced Texans who need an abortion to uproot their lives amid a pandemic and travel out of state for care, significantly delaying their abortions. And that鈥檚 the best-case scenario. Despite the extraordinary efforts of abortion funds and practical support organizations, all too many Texans ultimately lack the resources or mobility to access abortion at great distances from home, and thus face the devastating consequences of unwanted pregnancy. Today鈥檚 ruling means that this cruelty will continue at enormous costs to Texans and their families.鈥