
Wall Street Journal: The Justice Department on Tuesday filed a lawsuit challenging Idaho’s
near total ban on abortion, setting up the Biden administration’s first legal
battle over abortion access since the Supreme Court in June overturned Roe v.
Wade and eliminated the constitutional right to end a pregnancy. The lawsuit
says Idaho’s abortion restrictions unlawfully conflict with a federal law that
requires hospitals accepting Medicare to provide emergency treatments, which
can sometimes include abortion. “If a patient comes into the emergency room
with a medical emergency jeopardizing the patient’s life or health, hospitals
must provide the treatment necessary to stabilize that patient,” Attorney
General Merrick Garland said. “This includes abortion when that is the necessary
treatment.” Idaho has a ban set to take effect later this month. The law has
exceptions allowing doctors to perform abortions to save the life of a pregnant
woman or in cases of rape or incest that have been reported to law enforcement.
It explicitly excludes cases in which a physician believes that a woman will
harm herself if the abortion isn’t performed. Penalties for providers who
violate Idaho’s law range from two to five years in prison (Wall Street Journal).
NBC: In a statement Tuesday, Gov. Brad Little, a Republican, said he would work with Idaho’s attorney general to defend the state law “in the face of federal meddling.” “Our nation’s highest court returned the issue of abortion to the states to regulate — end of story,” Little said. “The U.S. Justice Department’s interference with Idaho’s pro-life law is another example of Biden overreaching yet again while he continues to ignore issues that really should demand his attention — like crushing inflation and the open border with Mexico” (NBC).
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