A View from the Left Side

Fighting Back Against Repressive Anti-Choice Laws in Arizona & Texas

Rep. Pam Powers Hannley Season 1 Episode 5

In 2016, Senate Republicans stopped President Barack Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court to replace Justice Antonin Scalia. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said it was too close to the election and that the new president should choose the new supreme court judge. Despite nationwide outcry against this, the Supreme Court functioned for months with only eight justices. After President Donald Trump took office, he nominated Judge Neil Gorsuch in January 2017,  Judge Brett Kavanaugh in July 2018, and Justice Amy Coney Barrett on September 2020, just months before the 2020 election. (I guess according to Mitch McConnell rules are meant to be broken.)

The US is currently suffering the aftermath of these three conservative appointments. Multiple Republican-controlled state legislatures have passed restrictive anti-abortion bills during the past decade. Since the Supreme Court has taken a decided hard turn to the right with the Trump era appointments, states like Texas and Arizona are in the forefront with anti-choice legislation designed to challenge Roe v Wade.

Now US Attorney General Merrick Garland is mounting a legal case against the Texas ban on abortions after six weeks. In Arizona, there is a lawsuit to stop SB1457, which criminalizes the woman, her doctor and anyone who helps her get an abort a fetus with a known birth defect, regardless of severity of the diagnosis or life expectancy after birth. 

My guests Rep. Athena Salman and Dianne Post discuss repressive antiabortion laws in red states, particularly Arizona and Texas and what we can do about it.

To protest this latest round of legislation attacking reproductive healthcare, Women's Marches will be held around the US and around Arizona on Saturday, October 2, 2021 to protest repressive anti-choice laws like those passed in Texas, Arizona and other red states.

Tucson Women's March: October 2 at 10 a.m. - noon, starting at Armory Park.
Phoenix Women's March:  October 2 at 10 a.m. - noon, starting at the State Capitol.

Podcast Time Stamp:
PPH Commentary on Reproductive Choice 0:54 
Interview Begins 3:34  
Legal Issues 7:38   
Texas v AZ antiabortion laws 12:27  
Federal Case against Texas 15:29   
AZ IS 'Pro-Birth'  |  Not 'Pro-Life' 17:53  
Inadequate Prenatal Care in AZ 18:56  
Health Is Not Ducey's Forte 20:50  
AZ Antiabortion Law Is Worse than Texas 21:49
Mail Order Drugs Illegal in AZ 25:13  
Our To-Do List 28:06  
Events 29:45  
Will There Be Boycotts of Texas and AZ? 31:26