TEXAS VIEW: Texas after Roe: Don’t go beyond abortion trigger law

THE POINT: No punishing women or businesses.

We knew it was probably coming, but the Supreme Court’s ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade was nonetheless stunning and monumental.

The states now control abortion policy. In Texas, there will be a push for even more laws against the procedure. But the state has gone quite far enough with its “trigger law,” a near-total ban that will take effect 30 days after the court formalizes its work.

No charging women who seek or obtain an abortion. No punishment for employers who want to cover travel for their Texas workers.

The law scheduled to kick in soon, authored by Southlake Republican Rep. Giovanni Capriglione, will be one of the most restrictive possible. It bars abortion from the moment of fertilization onward. The only exception is when a doctor exercising “reasonable medical judgment” believes that the woman is at “serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function” or death.

LIMITS ON MENTAL-HEALTH EXEMPTIONS

It contains a provision that seems to target possible mental-health concerns, too. Under the law, a doctor cannot perform an abortion because he or she fears the woman “would engage in conduct that might result” in her death or substantial harm.

And it’s serious business: If the abortion is successful, anyone who performed or induced it can be convicted of a first-degree felony, punishable by up to life in prison, and a fine of at least $100,000.

There’s no exemption for rape or incest, as even many ardent abortion opponents would want. It does, at least, declare that women are not to be charged or prosecuted, though some of Capriglione’s Republican colleagues might push for that, too.

The burden upon Texas women determined to obtain an abortion — there are about 7 million of child-bearing age here — will be substantial enough. The Guttmacher Institute, an abortion-rights advocacy group, calculates that the average Texan would need to travel more than 500 miles, based on the state’s size and the likely abortion policies in neighboring states.

All of this became law in Texas without much notice in last year’s regular legislative session. Perhaps that was because of the focus on the “heartbeat bill” that effectively bars abortions after six weeks by allowing civil suits against providers. Perhaps it was because a reversal of Roe was still theoretical.

When the reality of the Supreme Court’s ruling hit, the debate might have shifted. Texas Republican leaders would certainly still ban the procedure, but perhaps they could have been swayed to include more exemptions.

Abortion opponents were winning the argument; abortion rates have been dropping for years. Confronted with the consequences of victory, might they have softened? We can’t know because the Legislature acted pre-emptively.

WHAT ABOUT TEXAS ‘HEARTBEAT’ BILL?

Still in play, too, is the heartbeat bill. Capriglione’s legislation makes clear that civil actions are still in place. With Roe gone, there may not be grounds for courts to reverse the law. So even if lawmakers resist the temptation to punish companies that help employees obtain abortions in other states, the courts could do it for them.

For a state that’s all about business and jobs, it would be a mistake.

Fort Worth Star-Telegram