Florida judge upholds law requiring 24-hour waiting period before getting an abortion by Ashley Sadler for Life Site News
Available data has shown that mandatory waiting periods significantly reduce abortion rates and increase birthrates in states where they are imposed.
A Florida judge on Tuesday upheld a 2015 pro-life law requiring women in the Sunshine State to wait 24 hours before getting an abortion, the latest move in a seven-year dispute about the controversial rule.
Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey in the state’s capital city of Tallahassee “tossed out a lawsuit” “filed on behalf of a Gainesville women’s clinic” to challenge the law, highlighting the fact that other medical procedures and important decisions, from getting married to purchasing a firearm, have even longer waiting periods, the Associated Press reported.
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Florida judge approves 24-hour waiting period for abortions https://t.co/lwLPI79hQU pic.twitter.com/plrtRX9Pqy
— South Florida Sun Sentinel (@SunSentinel) April 12, 2022
Available data has shown that mandatory waiting periods significantly reduce abortion rates and increase birthrates in states where they are implemented.
In Mississippi, the first U.S. state to impose a mandatory waiting period for abortion access, the policy was found to result in a 10%-19% reduction in overall abortions in the state.
“Twenty-four hours is the minimum time needed to sleep on such an important decision,” Judge Dempsey wrote, according to the Miami Herald.
The pro-life law has faced ongoing challenges since it was enacted in 2015. In 2018, Leon County Circuit Court Judge Terry Lewis ruled that the mandatory waiting period was unconstitutional, despite the fact that 27 other states had similar requirements on the books.
In 2019, a Florida appeals court reversed Lewis’ ruling.
Meanwhile, the Tallahassee judge’s Tuesday decision to toss out the lawsuit challenging the rule was met with praise by the Florida Conference of Catholic Bishops.
“The 24-hour reflection period is a reasonable measure that will empower women to make truly informed, deliberate decisions apart from the abortion industry’s pressures,” said the Florida bishops’ lobbyist, Christie Arnold, in a news release, the Miami Herald noted.