Supreme Court refuses again to block Texas abortion law

·2 min read
In this Nov. 4, 2020 file photo, The Supreme Court is seen in Washington. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
The Supreme Court in Washington. (Associated Press)

The Supreme Court on Friday refused again to put on hold a Texas abortion law that makes it illegal for doctors to end a pregnancy after about six weeks.

Instead, the justices said they will hear arguments next month on whether the Justice Department has standing to sue Texas over a law that denies women their right to choose abortion.

The outcome is mostly a setback for the Biden administration and abortion rights advocates. They had asked the court to put the Texas law on hold as constitutional and procedural issues were weighed.

Instead, the court, over a dissent by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, allowed the law to remain in effect. And the justices said they would weigh only the procedural issues, not the question of whether the Texas law is constitutional.

The Biden administration had argued the Texas was using a private bounty scheme to deny women their constitutional rights.

The Texas Heartbeat Act, known also as Senate Bill 8, authorizes private lawsuits against doctors who perform abortions after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, at about six weeks.

This is the second time the court has refused to block the Texas law On Sept. 1, the conservative majority by a 5-4 vote allowed the Texas law to take effect, saying the case "presents complex and novel ... procedural questions."

That decision drew sharp reaction because it allowed the nation's second largest state by population to effectively ban most abortions, even though the Supreme Court has said for nearly 50 years they were constitutionally protected up to about 24 weeks.

A week later, Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland announced the Justice Department was suing Texas for violating the constitutional rights of women there. He won a ruling from a federal judge in Austin, who put the law on hold. But the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals set aside the judge's ruling by a 2-1 vote in a one-paragraph order.

Responding quickly, the Justice Department filed an emergency appeal on Oct. 18 urging the Supreme Court to intervene.

Instead they won only a hearing on whether the U.S. government has standing to sue Texas. The court said it will hear arguments on that issue on Nov. 1.

The justices are already set to reconsider the right to abortion in a case from Mississippi, which has imposed a 15-week limit on abortions. After winning a review of that issue, that state's attorneys raised the stakes, arguing the court should overturn the 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision entirely and allow states to make nearly all abortions a crime.

The court will hear arguments on Dec. 1 in that case, Dobbs vs. Jackson Women's Health Organization.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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