Planned Parenthood Sues to Block Florida Law Banning Abortions on Babies After 15 Weeks

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Jun 1, 2022   |   1:33PM   |   Tallahassee, Florida

The Planned Parenthood abortion business has filed suit to block the pro-life law Governor Ron DeSantis recently signed that bans abortions on babies after 15 weeks.

The law is estimated to save as many as 5,000 babies from abortions but that’s millions of dollars in lost profit for the nation’s biggest abortion company, so it filed suit today hoping to overturn the law. The law was set to go into effect July 1 but the abortion giant is hoping to block the law while its lawsuit proceeds.

The Florida Senate passed a historic pro-life bill in April to protect unborn babies by banning abortions after 15 weeks. The state Senate voted 23-15 along party lines to give final approval of the Reducing Fetal and Infant Mortality Act (House Bill 5).

The ACLU filed the suit for Planned Parenthood and tweeted notice of the lawsuit today.

“The ban also threatens to put doctors in jail for providing essential care beyond that point. Florida, we’ll see you in court,” it says. “The ban would have a devastating effect on abortion access in a state where access is already restricted. Resulting barriers will force Floridians to remain pregnant against their will, endangering their families, health, and lives.”

However, banning aboritons doesn’t make women get pregnant and plenty of options are available to protect pregnancy.

Here’s more:

“No person can truly call themselves free if they can’t make decisions about their own body,” Stephanie Fraim said.

Fraim is the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida.

“This law is an attack on our freedom,” she said. “We should stand up and say you cannot control me, you cannot take my freedom away from me. We need this health care.”

When he signed the bill, DeSantis said the state needs to protect defenseless unborn children.

“We’re here today to protect life,” Governor DeSantis said at a large ceremony to sign the bill. “We’re here today to defend those who can’t defend themselves.”

The governor said the bill “protects the rights of unborn children starting at 15 weeks. This is a time where these babies have beating hearts. They can move, they can taste, they can see, they can feel pain, they can suck their thumb, and they have brain waves.”

“Life is a sacred gift worthy of our protection, and I am proud to sign this great piece of legislation which represents the most significant protections for life in the state’s modern history,” he said.

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“So this will represent the most significant protections for life that have been enacted in this state in a generation.”

The legislation, which would go into effect July 1, bans abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, with exceptions if the mother’s life is at risk or the unborn baby has a fatal disorder. It also includes measures to reduce infant mortality and a requirement that abortion facilities report suspected human trafficking cases to the state.

Sponsors of the bill were delighted the legislature approved it.

“I never dreamed I’d be standing here today, but actually being able to save the life of babies,” said state Sen. Kelli Stargel, R-Lakeland, according to Politico. “God is so good.”

Democrat lawmakers and pro-abortion groups slammed the bill as “cruel” and “a direct assault on the people of Florida and our constitutional rights,” according to the report. But the bill would protect unborn babies’ right to life at a point when most other countries across the world already do.

Polling released in 2019 shows 76% of Florida voters – including 64% of Democrats, 75% of Independents, 77% of women, and 53% of self-described pro-choice voters – support a law prohibiting late-term abortions (only 24% support allowing late-term abortions).

Meanwhile, Florida legislators have provided support for women and children. Florida legislators have appropriated $4.5 million in funding in FY 2022 for the Florida Pregnancy Care Center Network, which provides pregnancy tests, counseling, health education, wellness exams, and other confidential services at no cost to the client – an increase from $4 million in previous years. Florida pregnancy centers served more than 76,000 women, men, youth and families in 2019, valued at $18.3 million, including nearly $12 million in medical services.

Currently, abortions are legal up to 24 weeks in Florida.

Andrew Shirvell, founder and executive director of Florida Voice for the Unborn, said he hopes the historic vote will come to represent the beginning of the end of all abortions in Florida.

“Florida Voice for the Unborn hails the historic nature of the 15-week abortion ban,” Shirvell said. “It represents the most vigorous protections for Florida’s unborn children that have ever been passed in the Florida Legislature since the U.S. Supreme Court imposed Roe v. Wade on our nation in early 1973.”

He estimated the bill will save up to 5,000 unborn babies from brutal, late-term abortions every year.

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Most countries in the world prohibit or strictly limit abortions after 15 weeks, including most European countries. The United States is one of only seven countries in the world that allows elective abortions up to birth. Polls consistently show a strong majority of Americans support legal protections for unborn babies, especially after the first trimester.

Senate President Wilton Simpson, who was adopted and grew up with foster siblings, said they chose the 15-week point because of the likelihood that it will be upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court and save lives, Politico continues.

“Every abortion kills a special and unique human being who deserves protection under the laws of this state and the chance to grow up in a loving family,” Simpson said, according to Florida Politics. “… Floridians can be proud that we live in a state that not only protects innocent, unborn life, but also supports children and parents.”

Currently, Roe v. Wade forces states to legalize the killing of unborn babies in abortions up to viability. However, the Supreme Court is considering a 15-week abortion ban in Mississippi, and a ruling is expected this summer. Because of the conservative majority on the high court, many hope the justices will uphold the law and allow states to protect unborn babies again.

Meanwhile, Florida abortion groups already are making plans to challenge the pro-life bill in court. According to the Sun Sentinel:

If the Supreme Court were to overturn Roe v. Wade, advocates could still challenge Florida’s 15-week ban or other bans on the basis that these restrictions violate Florida’s state constitution and the right to privacy in medical decisions, said Kait Thomson, director of government relations and community engagement at Planned Parenthood of Southwest and Central Florida.

Planned Parenthood leaders bashed the 15-week ban as “cruel” and “dangerous,” but the opposite is true. The bill would save thousands of unborn babies every year from unnecessary and brutal abortion deaths. In the second trimester, the most common abortion method is a D&E, or dismemberment abortion, in which the unborn baby is torn limb from limb while their heart is still beating.