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Abortions in Texas fell 60% in the first month under restrictive new law

Antiabortion protesters marching
Antiabortion protesters in Dallas celebrate Texas’ restrictive abortion law.
(Shafkat Anowar / Dallas Morning News)
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Abortions in Texas fell by 60% in the first month under the most restrictive abortion law in the U.S. in decades, according to new figures that for the first time reveal a full accounting of the law’s immediate impact.

The nearly 2,200 abortions reported by Texas providers in September came after the law took effect. The law bans the procedure once cardiac activity is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy, and does not allow for exceptions in cases of rape or incest. The figures were released this month by the Texas Health and Human Services Commission.

In August, there had been more than 5,400 abortions statewide. Texas health officials said more data would be released on a monthly basis.

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The numbers offer a fuller picture of the sharp drop in patients that Texas doctors have described in their clinics over the last five months, during which time court rulings have repeatedly allowed the restrictions to stay in place. It has left some Texas patients traveling hundreds of miles to clinics in neighboring states or farther, causing a backlog of appointments in those places.

Planned Parenthood issued a statement calling the numbers “the very beginning of the devastating impact” of the law.

The Texas law conflicts with landmark Supreme Court rulings that prevent a state from banning abortion early in pregnancy. But it was written in a way that has essentially outmaneuvered those precedents.

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Staff at Texas abortion clinics are surveilled constantly. People eager to sue us send fake patients into our clinics to see if we will break the law.

Under the law, any private citizen is entitled to collect $10,000 or more if they bring a successful lawsuit against someone who performed or helped a woman obtain an abortion after the time limit, a payment that opponents have condemned as a bounty. So far, no antiabortion supporters have filed any suits.

With few options left, Texas abortion providers have acknowledged that the law is likely to stay on the books for the foreseeable future.

Since the Texas law took effect, similar measures have been introduced in GOP-controlled statehouses nationwide, but none have passed. Arizona Republicans this month continued moving swiftly to outlaw abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

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It comes as the Supreme Court has signaled a willingness to weaken or reverse the landmark Roe vs. Wade precedent in a ruling expected later this year. If that happens, as many as 26 states would institute abortion-access restrictions within a year if permitted by the court, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion rights.

At least 12 states have “trigger bans” on the books, with restrictions that would kick in automatically if the justices overturn or weaken federal protections on abortion access.

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