Abortion Rights Groups Sue to Block Post-Roe Trigger Laws in Louisiana
Reproductive rights groups in Louisiana filed suit Monday in an effort to block trigger-ban laws that took effect in the state after the U.S. Supreme Court’s right-wing majority struck down Roe v. Wade last week, ending constitutional protections for abortion care.
Filed by the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) on behalf of Hope Medical Group for Women, Hope’s administrator Kathaleen Pittman, and Medical Students for Choice, the lawsuit seeks a temporary restraining order barring enforcement of the trigger laws, which banned abortion in Louisiana immediately after the high court handed down its ruling on Friday.
All three of Louisiana’s remaining abortion clinics, including Hope Medical Group, were forced to stop performing the procedure following the Supreme Court’s unpopular decision. Abortion is now illegal in Louisiana except when it is deemed necessary to save the life of the pregnant person.
“A public health emergency is about to engulf the nation,” said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights. “As expected, Louisiana and many other states wasted no time enacting bans and eliminating abortion entirely. People who need an abortion right now are in a state of panic.”
“We will be fighting to restore access in Louisiana and other states for as long as we can,” Northup added. “Every day that a clinic is open and providing abortion services can make a difference in a person’s life.”
Louisiana is one of 13 states that had trigger bans in place in preparation for the end of Roe. “Louisiana women would have to travel as far as New Mexico or Illinois to have an abortion” under the newly enacted laws, noted the local Daily Advertiser.
The CRR lawsuit contends that Louisiana’s trigger laws must be struck down because they are “unconstitutionally vague.”
“Seeking reproductive care is already difficult in the U.S., and especially in Louisiana,” Pittman of Hope Medical Group said in a statement Monday. “Now, as state governments are trying to ban abortion throughout the country, including in Louisiana, my heart is with our patients whose entire lives and future may change based on the next few days.”
“We are committed to this monumental legal challenge—not to perpetuate an endless political battle, but to ensure our patients’ wellbeing and so that they may draw strength from our dedication to this fight,” said Pittman.
Louisiana is just one of several trigger-ban states hit with lawsuits from reproductive rights groups in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to end Roe, which sparked nationwide outrage and mass protests.
The Kentucky branch of the ACLU has signaled its intent to take legal action against the state government for outlawing abortion.
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jake Johnson.