Fifth Circuit Agrees to Hold Hearing on Texas Abortion Law in January

On Monday, a federal appeals court agreed to hear arguments relating to Texas’s restrictive abortion ban on January 7, a move that one of the dissenting judges on the court said is an “impermissible delay” to deciding whether the statute is constitutional.

The U.S. Supreme Court heard from abortion providers earlier this month. The court ruled in favor of the providers. those plaintiffs had a right to challenge the law’s legalityin federal courts, but allowed law to continue in force until it is litigated further.

The law bans abortion after six weeks of pregnancy — before many individuals even know they are pregnant — and makes no exceptions for rape or incest. Instead of having the state enforce the statute, the legislation allows legislators to avoid lawsuits by strategically Privat individuals bear the burden of enforcementYou can sue abortion providers up to $10,000.

Although the Supreme Court accepted the argument that abortion providers have the right to sue over the law, it stated that they can’t file lawsuits against Texas judges, county clerks, the state Attorney General’s office or anti-abortion crusaders who advocated for the law. Providers are only allowed to sue administrative officialsTexas Medical Board, Texas Board of Nursing and Texas Board of Pharmacy. Texas Health and Human Services Commission.

Texas officials in favor of upholding the law responded to the Supreme Court’s ruling by filing a lawsuit of their own, demanding that the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals remand the case to the state Supreme Court, allowing the state court to determine whether lawsuits could be filed against officials on those boards and commissions. Abortion providers argued against that action, saying that the move was nothing more than “a transparent attempt to forestall relief” and “indefinitely prevent plaintiffs from obtaining any effective relief from the district court in the face of a law that is clearly contrary to Supreme Court precedent.”

In spite of those protestations, the Fifth Circuit Court agreed to hear the Texas officials’ arguments, setting a date of January 7To transfer the case to a state Supreme Court.

It is likely that the Fifth Circuit Court will be consulted. the most conservative of the 13 appellate courts in the country, will agree to Texas officials’ demands to move the case to the state Supreme Court. If that happens, Texas abortion providers can appeal the decision and send it back to the federal Supreme Court to decide if the move was appropriate.

Judge Stephen Higginson, a circuit judge on the Fifth Circuit Court, dissented with his colleagues’ decision to hear the case, arguing that the federal Supreme Court was clear in its previous ruling that the matter should return to the federal court system.

“The Court majority could not have been more explicit, declaring that it ‘approves today’ the plaintiffs’ challenges in federal court,” Higginson wrote in his dissent. “In its exact holding, the Court stated, ‘we hold that sovereign immunity does not bar the petitioners’ suit against these named defendants at the motion to dismiss stage.’”

“What this court does today adds impermissible delay to the vindication of the constitutional rights of Texas women in federal court,” Higginson went on.

The decision by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to consider additional ways to impede abortion providers’ challenges to the Texas law comes as the Supreme Court is considering whether to undo federal abortion protections that have been established for almost 50 years. In December, the court heard challenges to a Mississippi abortion law, in which state officials argued in favor of dismantling the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Roe v. Wade1973 case

Conservative bloc justices, who compose a majority of the Supreme Court’s bench, appeared receptive to those arguments, asking questions and making comments that indicated their openness to The long-established precedent is being challenged. This would result in states imposing stricter abortion restrictions without considering the rights of providers or individuals.