STANDING UP FOR LIFE, AFL FILES AMICUS BRIEF IN TEXAS SUPREME COURT CASE INVOLVING THE CITY OF AUSTIN’S PROVISION OF TAXPAYER FUNDS TO ORGANIZATIONS THAT AID AND ABET ABORTIONS
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Last night, America First Legal (AFL) filed an amicus brief in the Texas Supreme Court in a case involving the City of Austin’s provision of taxpayer funds to organizations that aid and abet abortions.
The Texas Constitution prohibits cities from enacting ordinances that “contain any provision inconsistent with the general laws enacted by the Legislature of this State.” Furthermore, Texas law prohibits conduct that “furnishes the means for procuring an abortion knowing the purpose intended,” and it also prohibits conduct that aids or abets a crime. Notably, the laws of Texas continue to define abortion as a criminal offense unless the mother’s life is in danger.
The City of Austin’s budget provides taxpayer money to organizations that aid and abet abortions. Don Zimmerman sued, but the lower courts rejected his case without performing any meaningful analysis. In so doing, the lower courts continued a sloppy, outcome-oriented approach in deciding the case–an approach that has been prevalent in other abortion cases, including Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). AFL’s brief made several critical points, including:
– Courts have a long history of ignoring the law in abortion cases to achieve desired policy results. Court decisions in abortion cases–including the Supreme Court of the United States–have been notorious instances of policy-driven jurisprudence that disregard the law.
– Courts lack the authority to “strike down” or erase laws. Legislative bodies make laws, courts do not. When a court declares a particular statute unconstitutional, it is simply saying that in the case before it, the statute is inconsistent with the Constitution. What a court does then is refuse to enforce the statute in a manner that produces an unconstitutional result in that case. But the statute remains on the books.
– Texas law requires courts to regard statutes as presumptively severable. When a court finds that a particular statute in a particular case was unconstitutional, Texas law makes it clear that any component or applications of that statute not at issue in the case remain good law.
AFL’s brief emphasizes that the judiciary is a coequal branch of government with the legislature, and has an obligation to apply the law, not pursue its own policy preferences.
Statement From America First Legal Vice-President and General Counsel Gene Hamilton:
“Modern abortion jurisdprudence exists only because courts–including the Supreme Court of the United States–have engaged in policy-based, outcome-oriented analyses to reach a desired result. But courts are not super-legislatures invested with the authority to create law and invent rights. America First Legal is proud to submit this brief to the Texas Supreme Court in support of the petitioner in this case, but more importantly, in support of the pro-life movement.”
Read the full case here.
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