Current:Home > MarketsNebraska’s new law limiting abortion and trans healthcare is argued before the state Supreme Court -Stellar Wealth Sphere
Nebraska’s new law limiting abortion and trans healthcare is argued before the state Supreme Court
View
Date:2025-04-12 03:30:32
Members of the Nebraska Supreme Court appeared to meet with skepticism a state lawyer’s defense of a new law that combines a 12-week abortion ban with another measure to limit gender-affirming health care for minors.
Assistant Attorney General Eric Hamilton argued Tuesday that the hybrid law does not violate a state constitutional requirement that legislative bills stick to a single subject. But he went further, stating that the case is not one the high court should rule on because it is politically charged and lawmaking is within the sole purview of the Legislature.
“Didn’t that ship sail about 150 years ago?” Chief Justice Mike Heavican retorted.
Hamilton stood firm, insisting the lawsuit presented a “nonjusticiable political question” and that the Legislature “self-polices” whether legislation holds to the state constitution’s single-subject rule.
“This court is allowed to review whether another branch has followed the constitutionally established process, isn’t it?” Justice John Freudenberg countered.
The arguments came in a lawsuit brought last year by the American Civil Liberties Union representing Planned Parenthood of the Heartland, contending that the hybrid law violates the one-subject rule. Lawmakers added the abortion ban to an existing bill dealing with gender-related care only after a proposed six-week abortion ban failed to defeat a filibuster.
The law was the Nebraska Legislature’s most controversial last session, and its gender-affirming care restrictions triggered an epic filibuster in which a handful of lawmakers sought to block every bill for the duration of the session — even ones they supported — in an effort to stymie it.
A district judge dismissed the lawsuit in August, and the ACLU appealed.
ACLU attorney Matt Segal argued Tuesday that the abortion segment of the measure and the transgender health care segment dealt with different subjects, included different titles within the legislation and even had different implementation dates. Lawmakers only tacked on the abortion ban to the gender-affirming care bill after the abortion bill had failed to advance on its own, he said.
Segal’s argument seemed based more on the way the Legislature passed the bill than on whether the bill violates the single-subject law, Justice William Cassel remarked.
But Justice Lindsey Miller-Lerman noted that the high court in 2020 blocked a ballot initiative seeking to legalize medical marijuana after finding it violated the state’s single-subject rule. The court found the initiative’s provisions to allow people to use marijuana and to produce it were separate subjects.
If producing medical marijuana and using it are two different topics, how can restricting abortion and transgender health care be the same subject, she asked.
“What we’ve just heard are attempts to shoot the moon,” Segal said in a rebuttal, closing with, “These are two passing ships in the night, and all they have in common is the sea.”
The high court will make a ruling on the case at a later date.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Save 70% on Tan-Luxe Self-Tanning Drops, Get a $158 Anthropologie Dress for $45, and More Weekend Deals
- Could tugboats have helped avert the bridge collapse tragedy in Baltimore?
- Save 70% on Tan-Luxe Self-Tanning Drops, Get a $158 Anthropologie Dress for $45, and More Weekend Deals
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Midwest Maple Syrup Producers Adapt to Record Warm Winter, Uncertainty as Climate Changes
- US probes complaints that Ford pickups can downshift without warning, increasing the risk of a crash
- American tourist dies, U.S. Marine missing in separate incidents off Puerto Rico coast
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Riley Strain Honored at Funeral Service
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Tracy Morgan clarifies his comments on Ozempic weight gain, says he takes it 'every Thursday'
- Judge questions Border Patrol stand that it’s not required to care for children at migrant camps
- Why King Charles III Won't Be Seated With Royal Family at Easter Service
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Gov. Evers vetoes $3 billion Republican tax cut, wolf hunting plan, DEI loyalty ban
- 4th person charged in ambush that helped Idaho prison inmate escape from Boise hospital
- Tennessee lawmakers split on how and why to give businesses major tax help under fear of lawsuit
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
New Jersey father charged after 9-year-old son’s body found in burning car
Why King Charles III Won't Be Seated With Royal Family at Easter Service
James Madison moves quickly, hires Preston Spradlin as new men's basketball coach
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
California governor to deploy 500 surveillance cameras to Oakland to fight crime
David Beckham welcomes Neymar to Miami. Could Neymar attend Messi, Inter Miami game?
Snow-covered bodies of 2 men from Senegal found in New York woods near Canadian border