Miami Herald

Floridians must listen to DNC speakers on abortion

- BY THE MIAMI HERALD EDITORIAL BOARD

Imagine if Florida lawmakers had paid attention to the women who have suffered because of antiaborti­on policies.

Their stories were readily available with a Google search, but the Republican­s who enacted the state’s extreme six-week ban ignored them. Voters now have a chance to listen before they vote on a proposed Florida constituti­onal Amendment 4 on the November ballot that — if approved by at least 60% of the electorate — will legalize abortion up to viability, usually at 24 weeks, and overturn the state ban.

At the Democratic National Convention in Chicago,

three women gave emotional speeches on Monday about the consequenc­es of taking reproducti­ve rights away. Amanda Zurawski and her husband, Kaitlyn Joshua, and Hadley Duvall stood together on stage, taking turns to tell their stories. It was a powerful moment.

Zurawski, who sued the state of Texas over its near-total abortion ban, had to wait three days before she could terminate her non-viable pregnancy — and that was only after she developed sepsis, a life-threatenin­g infection. Texas’ ban makes exceptions to save the patient’s life but the language in the law is so vague that doctors fear facing felony charges.

Florida’s ban also has such exceptions but they come with burdensome requiremen­ts.

An abortion after six weeks is only allowed in most cases if “Two physicians certify in writing that, in reasonable medical judgment, the terminatio­n of the pregnancy is necessary to save the pregnant woman’s life or avert... physical impairment.”

The law also bans doctors from using telehealth to perform an abortion (say, via medication) and bans medication from being delivered by mail, imposing another hurdle for women in rural or disadvanta­ged areas.

These so-called exceptions have left doctors fearful that the state will second guess their medical judgment. The results are clear in the plight of women like a Lakeland mother who was denied an abortion under Florida’s previous 15-week ban and forced to give birth to a baby with a fatal abnormalit­y, putting her own life at risk. She luckily survived to tell her story of holding her son, who had no kidneys, in her arms as he died moments after being born.

Women should be trusted to make decisions on whether to proceed with a non-viable pregnancy.

But, thanks to draconian laws, they are often not.

At the DNC, Joshua said she was turned away by two Louisiana emergency rooms while having a miscarriag­e. Because of the state’s strict abortion ban and vague exceptions to protect patients’ lives, Joshua said, “No one would confirm I was miscarryin­g” even though she was bleeding and in pain.

“No woman should experience what I endured but too many have,” Joshua said. “They write to me saying what happened to you happened to me.”

Duvall of Kentucky became pregnant at 12 as a result of being raped by her stepfather about a decade ago. She was not directly impacted by her state’s abortion ban, which doesn’t make exceptions for rape and incest and went into effect after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.

Yet she has become one of the most prominent voices for abortion rights and was featured in ads in Democratic Kentucky

Gov. Andy Beshear’s successful reelection campaign last year.

Florida’s ban makes exceptions for rape, incest and victims of human traffickin­g, requiring women to show a police report or other evidence that they were victims of a crime.

Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has boasted about appointing three conservati­ve Supreme Court justices who helped overturn Roe v. Wade. He said in June that it has been “a beautiful thing to watch” states pass a patchwork of laws on abortion now that it is no longer a right protected at the federal level.

“[Donald Trump] calls it a beautiful thing,” Duvall told the DNC crowd. “What is so beautiful about a child having to carry her parents’ child?”

Unless Florida voters take action, the stories heard at the Democratic National Convention will be just a prelude to the risks that women face when they no longer have choice in the Sunshine State.

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