On Friday, when he hoped no one was looking, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) approved sweeping new restrictions on reproductive rights, including a requirement that women receive a medically unnecessary ultrasound before terminating a pregnancy, and regulatory measures that would close half of the state’s abortion clinics.
The law was supposed to go into effect statewide yesterday. A federal court had other ideas.
A federal judge Monday temporarily blocked part of Wisconsin’s new abortion law and scheduled a hearing for next week.
The law, which went into effect Monday, includes provisions similar to those in several other states that require women to undergo an ultrasound procedure before having an abortion and require doctors who provide abortion services to have admitting privileges at a hospital.
U.S. District Judge William Conley issued a temporary restraining order yesterday afternoon, blocking the admitting privileges requirement. He also set a hearing on a full injunction for July 17 — a week from tomorrow.
Specifically, Conley noted in his 19-page ruling that the admitting-privileges provision of the Republican measure serves “no medical purpose” and was rushed into law for no apparent reason. It is up to state officials to prove that it safeguarded women’s health, he wrote, which he said “does not bear even superficial scrutiny on the current record.”
For opponents of reproductive rights, Wisconsin was discouraging, but they saw far more progress in Texas, where a state House committee, following a nine-hour hearing, easily approved sweeping new restrictions. The process did not go smoothly — as committee Democrats noted, GOP committee leaders “limited testimony at a public hearing, declined to hear from hundreds more waiting to testify and refused to consider Democratic amendments — and at times even failed recognize Democrats to speak at all to raise questions.”









