Lawmakers can intervene, face March 24 deadline in abortion pill lawsuit | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is CJ Staff.

    A federal judge has granted N.C. legislative leaders' request to intervene in a lawsuit targeting the state's abortion pill restrictions. An order issued Friday sets a March 24 deadline for lawmakers to respond to the suit.

    U.S. District Judge William Osteen issued his order after the plaintiff and defendants in the case filed separate court documents in recent weeks. Each party agreed not to oppose lawmakers' participation in the case.

    Dr. Amy Bryant, the UNC Health doctor challenging the abortion pill law, suggested the March 24 date for lawmakers to "file their answer or motion to dismiss" her lawsuit. In a Feb. 23 filing, Bryant indicated she did "not oppose" legislative intervention. She also said she would "not respond at this time to their misplaced arguments regarding the merits" of her case.

    Legislative leaders asked to take part in the lawsuit after N.C. Attorney General Josh Stein announced he would not defend state law in the case.

    The suit Bryant v. Stein, filed Jan. 25, targeted the attorney general, the Orange-Chatham County district attorney, the N.C. secretary of health and human services, and members of the N.C. Medical Board. The complaint did not mention legislative leaders, even though the General Assembly approved the disputed law.

    "The Legislative Leaders have an interest in upholding the validity of state statutes aimed at protecting unborn life, promoting maternal health and safety, and regulating the medical profession, " according to the motion from lawmakers' attorneys. "North Carolina law designates the Legislative Leaders as agents of the State for the purpose of intervening to defend these statutes. Routine application of recent Supreme Court precedent should make this a fairly simple issue."

    "This action seeks to undermine the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization by usurping the authority of the people of North Carolina, acting through their elected representatives, to reasonably regulate abortion in their state," according to the motion. "It does so by challenging several commonsense health-and-safety laws that have been on the books for years, based on a new and incorrect argument that the FDA's decision to permit chemical abortion drugs to be marketed under certain conditions means that states cannot enact their own laws regulating the safety of chemical abortion for their citizens."

    The motion cites the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 ruling in Berger v. NAACP, in which the high court ruled, 8-1, that lawmakers could intervene in a federal lawsuit challenging the states' voter ID law.

    "The Supreme Court recognized the Legislative Leaders' significant protectable interest in protecting valid North Carolina laws and potential impairment if they are blocked from participating in a lawsuit about the validity [of] North Carolina laws," lawmakers argued.

    "This case proves the necessity and wisdom of North Carolina's choice about who can speak on the State's behalf in federal court," according to the motion. "Attorney General Joshua Stein is a named defendant who publicly opposes North Carolina's laws regulating abortion. He informed the Legislative Leaders that he [will] not defend the challenged laws in this case and will affirmatively support Plaintiff's challenge. That makes the Legislative Leaders' intervention even more important."

    Bryant, the plaintiff, also took part in a 2016 lawsuit that challenged other N.C. abortion laws, including the ban on most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. That lawsuit proved successful for abortion advocates until the U.S. Supreme Court's 2022 Dobbs ruling.

    Osteen oversaw the earlier case as well. He "vacated and dissolved" his injunction against North Carolina's abortion law in August 2022. The judge cited the Dobbs ruling in his decision.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Vin(not so)Fast. Vietnamese EV maker VinFast’s plans in NC delayed to 2025 Carolina Journal, Statewide, Editorials, Government, Op-Ed & Politics, State and Federal Does NC need to entice filmmakers with incentives?


HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

“The world needs more fossil fuels,” according to Alex Epstein, founder of the Center for Industrial Progress. Epstein argues that the benefits of energy sources such as oil, coal, and natural gas far outweigh the costs.
Two recent news stories about educational institutions in our state illustrate the truth of that statement.
As lawmakers in the General Assembly are poised to consider a bill that would streamline the process of approving new charter schools, a statewide charter advocacy organization reports that more than 77,000 students remain on waitlists to join charter schools.
Even a supposed federal government watchdog has gone radically woke, prompting harsh criticism from conservatives.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced on Tuesday that he is sending more than 1,100 assets to Texas to assist Governor Greg Abbott in combatting the illegal immigration crisis that President Joe Biden caused on the southern border with his policies.
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador accused the Pentagon of spying on Mexico’s government, vowing to safeguard classified military information to protect its national security after a spate of documents leaked in U.S. media.

HbAD1

America is in freefall. Cities are crumbling, with open drug abuse and homeless everywhere, overdose deaths are soaring, there’s a mental health epidemic, and then there are the crises, oh the crises: the border, the federal debt, lack of affordable housing, flat-out unaffordable health care.
On Tuesday, the House Health Committee will consider several bills that critics say are likely to raise insurance costs for consumers.
Refusing to look inward, opponents of school choice insist the only thing needed to improve public schools is more money
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services will host a live Cafecito and Spanish-language tele-town hall on Wednesday, April 26, from 6 to 7 p.m.
Former U.S. Attorney General William Barr said during an interview this week that special counsel John Durham’s report on the origins of the FBI’s investigation into former President Donald Trump “vindicated” the former president and that Trump was right from the beginning
A woman arrested during an April 2020 ReOpenNC COVID shutdown protest is suing the governor, the city of Raleigh, and state and local law enforcement officials. She argues that defendants violated her constitutional rights.

HbAD2

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis hit back at Donald Trump on Tuesday over a criticism the former president leveled at DeSantis’ decision to sign a six-week abortion ban into law.

HbAD3

 
Back to Top