Idaho top court allows near-total abortion ban to take effect

Planned Parenthood affiliate argued ban would violate Idahoans’ privacy and equal protection rights under state’s constitution

US attorney general Merrick Garland and associate attorney general Vanita Gupta during a news conference to announce litigation the department of justice is bringing against Idaho for the purpose of protecting access to reproductive healthcare following the supreme court's decision. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
US attorney general Merrick Garland and associate attorney general Vanita Gupta during a news conference to announce litigation the department of justice is bringing against Idaho for the purpose of protecting access to reproductive healthcare following the supreme court's decision. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

Idaho’s top court on Friday refused to stop a Republican-backed state law criminalising nearly all abortions from taking effect after the US supreme court overturned the 1973 decision Roe v Wade that had recognised a constitutional right to the procedure.

In a three-two ruling, the Idaho supreme court rejected a bid by a Planned Parenthood affiliate to prevent a ban from taking effect on August 25th that the abortion provider argued would violate Idahoans’ privacy and equal protection rights under the state’s constitution. The measure allows for abortions only in cases of rape, incest or to prevent a pregnant woman’s death.

The court also lifted an earlier order that it issued in April blocking a separate Idaho law banning abortion after six weeks of pregnancy enforced through private lawsuits by citizens, allowing it to take effect immediately.

Ms Justice Robyn Brody, writing for the court, said given the US supreme court’s June decision, Planned Parenthood was not entitled to the “drastic” relief it sought, noting that abortion was illegal in Idaho before the Roe decision.

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“Moreover, what petitioners are asking this court to ultimately do is to declare a right to abortion under the Idaho constitution when — on its face — there is none,” the judge said.

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Alexis McGill Johnson, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, in a statement called the ruling “horrific and cruel”.

Idaho state officials did not respond to requests for comment.

About half of the US states have or are expected to seek to ban or curtail abortions following the conservative-majority US supreme court’s June 24th decision to overturn Roe v Wade, which legalised the procedure nationwide.

Those states include Idaho, which like 12 others adopted “trigger” laws banning abortion upon such a decision. Louisiana’s top court earlier on Friday rejected an appeal by abortion rights supporters seeking to block a similar ban.

The Idaho court did not decide on the merits of Planned Parenthood’s challenge to the ban and instead said it would hear arguments on September 29th.

Mr Justice John Stegner in a dissenting opinion said the court should have proceeded more cautiously and blocked the ban in the interim, saying that “never in our nation’s history has a fundamental right once granted to her citizens been revoked”.

The US justice department on August 2nd separately sued in a bid to block the Idaho ban, saying it conflicts with a federal law requiring hospitals to provide abortion in medical emergencies if necessary. That lawsuit, to be argued on August 22nd, was the first action by the federal government challenging state abortion laws after Roe was reversed. — Reuters

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