Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Biden and Democrat Governors Conspire to Kill More Babies  George Rasley, CHQ Editor 4 days ago

Leftwing news outlet Axios reports President Joe Biden will meet today with the governors of states where abortions will remain legal after the authority to regulate abortion was properly returned to the states by the Supreme Court's recent Dobbs decision.


In the wake of Dobbs, the Biden administration announced a plan to counter the ruling. It aims to "increase access" to FDA-approved abortion pills, among other steps, reported Axios' Oriana Gonzalez and Mike Allen.

Abortion will immediately become illegal in at least 13 states after the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, and more will likely quickly follow suit, Axios' Oriana Gonzalez reports. Lawmakers in Democrat-controlled states responded to Dobbs by quickly approving measures to allow women and doctors to continue to kill babies. Some are also advancing legislation to expand abortion access to prepare for an anticipated influx of out-of-state patients who are seeking to kill their baby.

California and Vermont are going even further by making abortion access a constitutional right. Making baby-killing a constitutional right in the state is the Democrats’ preferred alternative since state constitutions are "by design" "very hard to amend," Jessica Arons, senior policy counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, told Axios.

In that effort the Far Left is consciously trying to put abortion beyond the reach of the electorate. "You can pass a bill that codifies abortion rights ... but if a future election changes the political makeup of the legislature and who's in the governor's office, then they could repeal the statute that has codified abortion rights."

Additionally, Arons explained that courts can "invalidate" a state law, but not a constitutional amendment because they are "bound" by that document.

In Alaska, Florida, Kansas, Montana and New Mexico, abortion access is protected by state Supreme Court precedent, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights. But those precedents may fall in the next few months as Florida and other states enact reasonable restrictions, such as Florida’s 15-week limit.

READ MORE

No comments: