(Life Action) On December 13, 2023, the New
Mexico Supreme Court will hear oral
arguments regarding whether or not local pro-life
ordinances in the state are legal following the enactment of the Reproductive
and Gender-Affirming Healthcare law.
According to
NM Political Report, the Reproductive
and Gender-Affirming Healthcare law, which was signed
into law on March 16, 2023, says that state or local governments, advisory
boards, commissions, agencies, or entities that receive public funding “shall
not deny, restrict or interfere with a person’s ability to access or provide
reproductive health care…”
It also
states, “A public body or an entity or individual acting on behalf of or within
the scope of the authority of a public body shall not deprive, through
prosecution, punishment or other means, a person’s ability to act or refrain
from acting during the person’s pregnancy based on the potential, actual or
perceived effect on the pregnancy.”
There are no
regulations on abortion in the state of New Mexico, which has seen an increase in
abortion facilities and a Planned Parenthood abortion business expansion since
the overturning of Roe v. Wade. New Mexico is also home to Southwestern Women’s
Options, the abortion facility responsible for the death of 24-year-old Keisha Atkins during
a 24-week abortion.
There
are four cities and two counties in
New Mexico that have established themselves as Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn,
with ordinances that prevent abortion facilities from setting up shop. New
Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez filed an emergency petition with the state
Supreme Court in March, shortly after the new law was signed, to block the
ordinances in Lea and Roosevelt counties and the cities of Hobbs and Clovis.
The state
Supreme Court has requested that all parties involved file briefs explaining
what effect the Reproductive and Gender-Affirming Healthcare law has on those
local ordinances.
In a clearly biased move, the court allowed some pro-abortion groups the chance to file amici briefs in favor of blocking the pro-life ordinances, it has denied pro-life groups the opportunity to file amici curiae on behalf of the sanctuary cities.
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