Texas’s 6-week abortion ban law sent by US Appeals Court to State Supreme Court
Last Updated on January 19, 2022 by Administrator
Written By – Dakshita Dubey
In United States, the State of Texas’s law that bans abortion once cardiac activity is detected — usually around six weeks, before some women know they are pregnant, is likely to stay in effect for the foreseeable future, as the federal appeals court ruled against sending the case back to only judge who has ever blocked the restrictions.
The decision by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans means that legal challenges to stop the nation’s most restrictive abortion law next move to the Texas Supreme Court, which is entirely controlled by Republican justices and does not have to act immediately.
Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court kept the law in place and allowed only a narrow challenge against the restrictions to proceed.
Abortion providers wanted their lawsuit sent back to a federal court in Austin that so far has been the only one to block the restrictions — albeit for only a few days. Instead, the conservative-leaning appeals court sent the case instead to the state supreme court.
Texas Right to Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion group, celebrated the decision.
“This is great news!” the group tweeted, saying the case will now go to one with a “Pro-Life majority.”
Texas abortion providers have said they are serving roughly a third of their typical number of patients since the law went into effect. Abortion clinics in neighboring states, meanwhile, say they continue to experience longer wait times for appointments because of a backlog of patients coming from Texas.
The Supreme Court signaled last month in the separate case out of Mississippi that it would roll back abortion rights, and possibly overturn its landmark Roe v. Wade decision, in a ruling that is expected later this year.