Miami Herald

Will Floridians vote on abortion in November? It’s up to DeSantis’ ‘conservati­ve’ Supreme Court

- BY ROMY ELLENBOGEN rellenboge­n@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

TALLAHASSE­E

Florida’s Supreme Court justices on Wednesday questioned whether a proposed amendment that would restore broader abortion access was “a wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

The amendment would protect abortion until viability, which is estimated to be at about 24 weeks. It would undo Florida’s current ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy and negate a six-week ban that lawmakers approved to take effect pending the outcome of an ongoing court case.

But whether the proposal appears on the 2024 ballot hinges on the conservati­ve seven-member Florida Supreme Court.

Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody and antiaborti­on groups challenged the amendment, saying its language is misleading and that it would usher in sweeping consequenc­es that would not be clear to voters.

But the group behind it, Floridians Protecting Freedom, argued that voters are “perfectly capable of reading the language and understand­ing it.” Whether they like the effects of the proposal would be someone’s decision in the voting booth, an attorney for the group said during oral arguments Wednesday.

The text of the proposed amendment says, in part, that “no law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”

Justices grilled attorneys on both sides of the issue, while outside the court, some protesters held up signs urging the justices to “let us vote” while others held placards saying that “Enshrining Abortion in the Florida Constituti­on is WRONG!”

Mat Staver — an attorney for Liberty Counsel, which opposes the amendment — said the proposal would substantia­lly disrupt abortion regulation, making it difficult for the state to monitor abortion as it does for other healthcare procedures.

Staver said if allowed to stand, the language would effectivel­y undo any and all abortion laws or regulation­s and could tie the hands of the court.

“It’s a total abolition of all the functions of those three branches of government with regards to the issue of abortion,” Staver said.

“You’re saying this is a wolf, and a wolf it may be, but it seems like our job is to answer whether it’s a wolf in sheep’s clothing,” said Justice John Couriel, who is one of the five justices appointed by Gov.

Ron DeSantis. The justices are tasked with ruling whether the ballot language is misleading and whether it deals with multiple subjects instead of only one.

Justices asked Courtney Brewer, an attorney representi­ng the group supporting the amendment, whether voters will have enough informatio­n to understand the effect of the ballot language.

Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz said the amendment didn’t seem like it was “really trying to be deceptive,” and said voters could decide if they wanted something more nuanced.

When Muñiz asked if Brewer was saying the amendment was a “wolf that comes as a wolf,” she said yes.

“If voters don’t agree with that they will have the opportunit­y to vote against it,” she said. “The arguments about what this amendment will do, this is not the time and place for that.”

Nathan Forrester, an attorney for the attorney general’s office, argued that the amendment’s title, which says it would “limit” government interferen­ce with abortion, is “understate­d to the point of deception” and that the ballot summary is unclear as to its effects.

“The people of Florida aren’t stupid, and they can figure this out,” Muñiz responded. “I think there may be a problem as to what it doesn’t say.”

Muñiz, who was also appointed by DeSantis, asked both sides whether unborn children have the same constituti­onal rights as people in Florida law, and whether that would prohibit the amendment or affect it. Forrester, of the attorney general’s office, said it wasn’t an argument that he had considered, and Brewer, representi­ng the proposed amendment, said it wasn’t an argument before the court.

Andrew Shirvell, the executive director of Florida Voice for the Unborn, said he knew the discussion in oral arguments would be difficult but said he was praying for the justices to disqualify the amendment.

He said if the court does not, “it will actually discredit this conservati­ve court that Governor DeSantis has built.” His group plans to create a political committee to oppose the proposed amendment if it does make it onto the ballot.

House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell, after the arguments, said she thought the court was not impressed with the state’s presentati­on.

“The plain language is very clear and a common voter can understand it,” Driskell said.

If the proposal makes it onto the ballot, 60% of Florida voters would need to support it for it to be enacted. About 1 million voters signed petitions to get the amendment on the ballot during a push backed by Planned Parenthood, the ACLU of Florida and other groups.

 ?? ROMY ELLENBOGEN Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau ?? People gather outside the Florida Supreme Court on Wednesday in Tallahasse­e before a hearing about a proposed constituti­onal amendment to restore broader access to abortion in the state.
ROMY ELLENBOGEN Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau People gather outside the Florida Supreme Court on Wednesday in Tallahasse­e before a hearing about a proposed constituti­onal amendment to restore broader access to abortion in the state.

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