In a single weekend, with temporary wins for abortion providers in Louisiana and Texas, one fact became ever clearer: The federal courts are the only thing standing between conservative lawmakers and a woman’s right to an abortion. For now, the news is good for abortion access in the region, but it is a fragile shield — one that may be breached in a matter of days.
In Baton Rouge on Sunday, district court judge John W. deGravelles granted a temporary restraining order to three of Louisiana’s five abortion clinics, who faced closure as they try to comply with a law requiring abortion providers to have admitting privileges at local hospitals. Meanwhile, in an emergency motion Sunday, the state of Texas asked the famously conservative Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to reverse an Austin district judge’s eleventh-hour decision on Friday, which prevented the closure of a majority of abortion clinics in the state and allowed at least one to reopen.
Texas, represented by attorney general and gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott, argued that the lower court judge, Lee Yeakel, ignored the fact that the Fifth Circuit previously said that driving 150 miles was not an “undue burden” on Texas women, the Supreme Court’s standard for rejecting an abortion restriction. The law was meant to go into effect Monday; the state asked the Fifth Circuit to rule on its status by Friday.
The Texas omnibus abortion law, the same one that Abbott’s Democratic opponent Wendy Davis filibustered, already devastated abortion access across the state when its admitting privileges requirement was allowed to go into effect by the Fifth Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court in November. There were 41 abortion clinics in Texas before the law took effect, and that number has since dropped to 19. The latest requirement to turn abortion clinics into mini-hospitals — which experts call medically unnecessary, and which would be financially impossible for the majority of providers — would have left seven or eight clinics in the second-largest state. That would mean that 930,000 women of reproductive age would live more than 150 miles from an abortion clinic.
“The practical impact on Texas women due to the clinics’ closure statewide would operate for a significant number of women in Texas just as drastically as a complete ban on abortion,” wrote Yeakel, a George W. Bush appointee, in his Friday decision. The Supreme Court has repeatedly said that banning abortion before fetal viability is unconstitutional.
Yeakel also said that a separate provision of the same law, which required Texas abortion providers to obtain admitting privileges at local hospitals, was unconstitutional as applied to two clinics in McAllen and El Paso. Whole Woman’s Health, which had to close its clinic in McAllen in March after its providers’ applications were rejected, said Sunday it would reopen there, and that its clinics in Fort Worth and San Antonio, threatened with closure under the ambulatory surgical requirement, would stay open.









