By Ian Millhiser on
October 31, 2013 at 8:32 pm
A panel of three Republican judges, all of whom were appointed by
President George W. Bush, granted the state of Texas’ request Wednesday
night to
reinstate a law that will force many of the state’s abortion clinics to close their doors. The order,
authored by Judge Priscilla Owen, grants a temporary stay of a lower court judge’s decision blocking a provision of Texas law that
requires abortion providers to have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital
in order to perform abortions at clinics. As Judge Lee Yeakel explained
in his opinion striking this part of the Texas law, many abortion
providers “do not currently have admitting privileges and cannot gain
admitting privileges for reasons including lack of a board certification
specialty, retirement, impact on their private practice, and residing
too geographically remote from the hospitals that are 30 miles from the
Whole Women’s Health Services facilities.” For this and related reasons,
the effect of the Texas law would be to prevent many clinics from
performing abortions altogether.
Judge Owen, the author of Wednesday’s opinion, is among the most
staunchly anti-abortion judges in the country. In 2000, when both Judge
Owen and future United States Attorney General Alberto Gonzales were
justices on the Texas Supreme Court, then-Justice Owen authored a
dissenting opinion seeking to make abortions more difficult to obtain in
Texas. Gonzales responded to Owen in a separate concurring opinion
that labeled Owen’s proposed resolution of the case an “
unconscionable act of judicial activism.”
The other two judges on the panel, Bush appointees Jennifer Walker
Elrod and Catharina Haynes are also considered staunchly conservative
judges.
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