Total abortion ban to be suspended in Arizona until 2023
Arizona’s attorney general has agreed not to enforce a near-total ban on abortions at least until next year, a move that Planned Parenthood Arizona credited this week with allowing the group to restart abortion care across the state.
The state’s largest provider of abortions restarted services at only their Tucson clinics after an appeals court blocked enforcement of the old law on October 7. A lower court had allowed enforcement of that law on September 23, halting all abortions statewide.
On October 27, Planned Parenthood said services would resume statewide, including at clinics in metro Phoenix and in Flagstaff.
“While we are celebrating today, we can’t ignore that we are still on a long and uncertain path to restoring the fundamental right to abortion in Arizona, and making this essential healthcare truly accessible and equitable for all people,” Brittany Fonteno, heads Planned Parenthood Arizona, said at a news conference, according to AP. “While abortion is currently legal in Arizona and we have resumed abortion care throughout the state, we know that this could very well be temporary.”
The only exception to the law is if the mother’s life is in jeopardy. The pre-statehood abortion ban law had been blocked since Roe was decided in 1973, but Republican Attorney General Mark Brnovich asked a court in Tucson to allow it to be enforced this summer. The law dating to 1864 carries a prison sentence of two to five years.
Meanwhile, a Phoenix physician who runs a clinic that provides abortions and the Arizona Medical Association filed a separate lawsuit that sought to block the territorial-era law, arguing that laws enacted by the Legislature after the 1973′s Roe v. Wade decision should take precedence and abortions should be allowed until 15 weeks into a pregnancy.
The lawsuit filed by a Phoenix abortion doctor and the Arizona Medical Association repeated many of the arguments made by Planned Parenthood in their failed effort last month to persuade the Tucson judge to keep in place a 50-year-old injunction barring enforcement of the old law. The judge said it was not procedurally proper for her to try to reconcile 50 years of later law with the old law.
Any decision by the court of appeals is certain to be appealed to the state Supreme Court, so any final decision could take well into 2023.
A law enacted by the Legislature this year limits abortions to 15 weeks into a pregnancy, well before the 24 weeks generally allowed under the Roe decision that was overruled by the U.S. Supreme Court in June.
Arizona women seeking abortions have been whipsawed by the state’s competing laws since the high court’s decision. Also in play is a “personhood” law that raised fears by providers that they could face charges under that law before a federal judge blocked it in July.
Abortion providers halted all care in the state after Roe was struck down, restarted in mid-July after the personhood law was blocked, and stopped them again when the Tucson judge allowed the 1864 law to be enforced.