Showing posts with label AMBER NICOLE THURMAN DEATH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMBER NICOLE THURMAN DEATH. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Woman? Or Human Incubator?

 


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Amber Thurman was killed by Georgia’s abortion ban. In need of a D&C procedure because of an incomplete medication abortion, care that is safe and effective, Thurman couldn’t get it. She died in a hospital after developing sepsis, leaving behind a young son.

She will not be the last woman to die in Georgia. The state has a ban on abortion after the sixth week, well before most women are even aware they are pregnant. That ban was lifted, temporarily as it turns out, by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney. McBurney was called upon to decide whether the Georgia Constitution protected a woman’s right to abortion care. He concluded that it did, and that “the liberty of privacy” reflected in Georgia’s Constitution means that pregnant women have the right to decide “whether they serve as human incubators for the five months leading up to viability.”

Predictably, it took Georgia’s Supreme Court only a week to undo that decision. Georgia reinstated the six-week ban, effective at 5:00 p.m. today. While the legal challenge to the ban continues, the ban itself will remain in effect while the case plays out in court.

Supreme Court Justices in Georgia are elected statewide in non-partisan elections. The Governor fills vacancies that happen at any other time, if a judge resigns, retires, or dies, by appointing a new justice of their choice. Eight of the nine current justices were originally appointed by Republican Governors. The ninth, Justice John J. Ellington, was elected. He wrote the lone dissent from the Georgia Court’s abortion decision, arguing that the case “should not be predetermined in the State’s favor before the appeal is even docketed,” and that “The State should not be in the business of enforcing laws that have been determined to violate fundamental rights guaranteed to millions of individuals under the Georgia Constitution.” Ellington would have permitted Judge McBurney’s stay to remain in place while the litigation was ongoing, but he was outvoted by the other eight justices. It’s illegal to perform an abortion in Georgia again.

The decision in Georgia came as no surprise. In the Deep South, there is enormous judicial hostility to a woman’s right to choose reproductive healthcare. In 2018, the then-Chief Judge of the Eleventh Circuit authored an opinion while Roe v. Wade was still the law of the land. The case is called West Alabama Women’s Center v. Williamsonand the opinion opens with these words: “there is constitutional law and then there is the aberration of constitutional law relating to abortion.” Judge Ed Carnes wrote, gratuitously, that the standard D&C process used for abortion should be called dismemberment abortion because “the method involves tearing apart and extracting piece-by-piece from the uterus what was until then a living unborn child.” That was not the issue in the case. Alabama had passed a statute limiting abortions that were protected under Roe, and the Eleventh Circuit rejected it, as Alabama knew it would, because it violated the law.

Now, free of that constraint, the Georgia Supreme Court has rejected women’s rights in favor of political expediency. In his opinion, Judge McBurney wrote, “Georgia has seized upon a point in gestation that has political salience, rather than medical or moral salience.” For too many people, sadly including judges, this is a debate about politics, not about women’s rights.

Donald Trump is against abortion, except when he isn’t. Melania Trump is selling books with the claim that she supports a woman’s right to choose (as if that matters to Republican politicians). And JD Vance has recently claimed he is unfamiliar with Georgia’s restrictions on abortion, but on a podcast in 2022, when he was trying to get elected to the Senate, he said that he supported a national ban on abortion. Subsequently, he told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that he was “sympathetic” to the view that a national ban was necessary to stop women from traveling across states to obtain an abortion. That’s the future vision.

Texas Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton is promoting what he is characterizing as a “major victory” in the fight to keep abortion illegal. Post-Dobbs, the Justice Department issued guidance that a federal law, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), requires emergency rooms at hospitals receiving Medicare funding (that’s virtually all of them) to provide abortions if a pregnant patient’s health or life is at serious risk, even in states where the procedure is banned. As of today, the Supreme Court has said that Texas doesn’t have to do that.

Texas sued the Biden Administration in 2022, and federal District Judge James Wesley Hendrix, a Trump appointee who is the only full-time federal judge in the Lubbock Division of the Northern District of Texas where the case was filed, enjoined enforcement of the federal statute while the litigation was underway. The Fifth Circuit upheld the injunction in January 2024. Today, the Supreme Court has too. Texas can continue to enforce its ban on abortion, even in emergency situations, while the litigation proceeds.

If the issue sounds familiar, it’s because it was before the Court last term in Moyle v. U.S., a case from Idaho. The state argued that its Defense of Life Act trumped EMTALA. The Court dismissed Moyle as improvidently granted, ducking the need to make a decision on the issue. Now it’s back.

So, more women like Amber Thurman have received death sentences in states like Texas and Georgia that ban abortion. No one can pretend they don't understand this: putting Supreme Court appointments back in Republican control would have dire consequences for pregnant patients. The Court is telling us what its view is, as are Trump and Vance. And we should listen. Because the lives and the rights of people we love are at stake.

When abortion is on the ballot, women and the people who love them turn out to vote. So make sure you’re having this conversation with voters around you. Abortion is on the ballot explicitly in some places this cycle, but in truth, it’s on the ballot everywhere. Protect women’s right to obtain medical care by electing state representatives and governors who support that right and will end abortion bans. Elect members of Congress and a President who will insist on women’s rights. At every step in the political process, elected officials play a role in guaranteeing or denying women’s rights. That choice is up to us.

We’re in this together,

Joyce

Saturday, October 5, 2024

When Georgia’s Lawmakers Passed a 6-Week Abortion Ban, They Signed Amber Thurman’s Death Warrant REMEMBER AMBER NICOLE THURMAN!

 


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And now we begin to learn the names of the women who were sent to their deaths by the Trump Supreme Court and the states which have enacted Trump Abortion Bans. So I thought I’d add to our collection of Wanted posters of those politicians who through their immorality or their criminality must be remembered throughout history for their actions. 

Download a PDF:

Justice For Amber Thurman Poster
6.79MB ∙ PDF file
Download

NOTE: To the archivists of the future — “For nearly 250 years the United States operated under a system of gender apartheid wherein the majority gender (Women, 51%) were ruled by the minority gender (Men, 49%). For 150 years Women could not vote or hold office. For 235 years they were not allowed to hold the presidency. For most of that time they were forced by the government to give birth, even against their will, should they have an unplanned pregnancy. That changed in 2025 when full rights to control their own bodies were restored — and no men were elected to the White House again for the next 32 years.”


Read Amber’s story here:

Abortion Bans Have Delayed Emergency Medical Care. In Georgia, Experts Say This Mother’s Death Was Preventable.” — ProPublica

Monday, September 23, 2024

POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Pressley’s Peach State pitch



Massachusetts Playbook logo

By Kelly Garrity

SAY HER NAME: 

AMBER NICOLE THURMAN DIED DUE TO GEORGIA'S 

ABORTION BAN!


GEORGIA ON HER MIND — 
The way Ayanna Pressley sees it, Democrats need to organize as though voters’ lives depend on it — “Because they do,” she told Playbook.

One example she pointed to: Amber Thurman, one of two Georgia women who ProPublica recently found died a preventable death after her care was complicated by the state’s abortion law.

Thurman’s story is on voters’ minds there, said Pressley, who just wrapped a busy trip stumping for the Harris-Walz ticket in the critical battleground state.

President Joe Biden’s prospects in the state that helped him secure a victory in 2020 were faltering before he dropped out of the race. With Vice President Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket, “we saw a new electoral map and a new coalition of voters emerging in real time,” Pressley told Playbook over the phone Sunday after finishing her two-day campaign sweep.

“What I'm most heartened by is the number of people for whom this is the first time that they’re phone banking, the first time they're canvassing, the first time that they have decided to lean in so actively in the process,” she said.

But the polls say Georgia is still a fight between Harris and former President Donald Trump. A CBS News/YouGov survey out yesterday showed Harris leading Trump 51-49 percent in battleground states including Georgia — within the poll’s +/-2.2 percentage point margin of error.

And a rule approved Friday by Georgia’s election board requiring ballots to be hand counted could open results up to legal challenges down the road.

Pressley spent the weekend helping launch a handful of field offices in counties across the state, and joined a gun safety forum with former Rep. Gabby Giffords, a gun violence survivor, and her husband, Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) before speaking at an Atlanta church on Sunday.

It’s not the first time Pressley has boosted the campaign in a swing state (she joined Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.) for a campaign event on abortion over the summer). Her roles as a member of the Stop Project 2025 task force and, amid the firestorm over false claims about Haitian migrants eating pets, as the co-chair of the Haiti caucus, have put her in a prime position to help message for Harris.

Plus, with no opponent on the ballot this year, Pressley has the time to hit the national trail — which’ll help build more goodwill with a possible presidential pick.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS . The Emerald Square Mall’s rodeo turned into an impromptu Attleboro bull run yesterday after a herd hopped the fence. Heads up if you’re in the area: There’s one still on the loose, as of last night.

TODAY — Gov. Maura Healey and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu deliver a signed Celtics basketball to the Hugh Roe O’Donnell elementary school to raise awareness about the importance of school attendance at 10:30 a.m. in East Boston. Healey speaks at the World Medical Innovation Forum at 1 p.m. in Everett and hosts a signing ceremony for a bill expanding protections for victims of sexual assault at 2:30 p.m. at the State House. She and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll attend the New England Council’s annual celebration at 7 p.m. in Boston.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Drop me a line: kgarrity@politico.com 

DATELINE BEACON HILL

ECO DEV UPDATE — An agreement on a long-awaited economic development bill could be coming in "the next few weeks."

“We are having great negotiations,” state Sen. Barry Finegold, who chairs the economic development committee, said during an interview on WCVB’s “On the Record,” Sunday. “And I do think we’re going to get something done. … I actually think in the next few weeks I think we’ll get something done.”

Meanwhile, the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation is out with a report emphasizing the need to get the billion-dollar borrowing bill passed — sooner rather than later, for the sake of the state’s competitiveness.

“The consistent inability to enact planned legislation over a two-year session indicates a policymaking process that is not working effectively,” a release from MTF reads. “The fact that the legislation in question defines and implements core elements of the state’s economic development plan sends the wrong message to communities and employers in the state who are looking to work with the public sector to expand economic opportunity and respond to changing conditions.”

MEANWHILE — “Does the legislative clock and calendar matter on Beacon Hill?,” by Chris Van Buskirk, Boston Herald.   PAYWALL FOR THE BOSTON HERALD RAG!

— “Who will investigate the State Police Academy death of Enrique Delgado-Garcia?” by Sean Cotter, The Boston Globe: “In 1988, the shocking death of a police trainee and the hospitalization of at least 10 others from injuries they suffered at a State Police-run academy led the attorney general’s office to turn to a rarely used legal process: a public judicial inquest. Now, a week after trainee Enrique Delgado-Garcia died at the State Police Academy, advocates have urged state authorities to consider that type of investigation again, amid calls for transparency in the probe into how he suffered fatal injuries during training in a boxing ring.”

RELATED — “State police suspend full-contact boxing training after trooper’s death,” by Lisa Gresci, 7 News Boston.

FROM THE HUB

— “Boston’s Black, Latino, Asian families are making more money, but income gaps remain, census data show,” by Tiana Woodard and Vince Dixon, The Boston Globe: “Since 2013, the median income of Black Boston households has grown 16 percent, and its grown 30 percent for both the typical Latino and Asian American family in Boston, when adjusted for inflation, according to data released last week by the US Census Bureau. However, white families in Boston still earn tens of thousands of dollars more a year and are the only group to exceed more than $100,000 in median household income, the data show.”

WATCH — “Mayor dazzles with piano performance at Boston Symphony Orchestra's free concert,” by Mary Saladna, WCVB.

YAHD SIGNS AND BUMPAH STICKAHS

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Sen. Elizabeth Warren has endorsed Tom Driscoll in his campaign for Essex County Clerk of Courts, according to his campaign.

— Rep. Lori Trahan is endorsing former Methuen City Councilor Eunice Zeigler for Governor’s Council in District 5.

ON THE AIRWAVES — Peabody city councilor and Republican District 5 Governor’s Council candidate Anne Manning-Martin is up with a radio ad today titled “Uniquely Qualified,” highlighting Manning-Martin’s resume. The 60-second ad will run for two weeks on stations in Lowell, Haverhill and Methuen.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

— “The tide is ‘wicked high.’ It’s a glimpse into Boston’s future if climate change continues to worsen,” by Erin Douglas, The Boston Globe: “At high tide around 1:30 p.m. on Friday, the water easily overtopped Long Wharf’s sea wall downtown, intriguing tourists and thrilling at least two local dogs that went for a brief swim. ... Scientists say that while the phenomenon is exceptional now, this level of flooding could become common in the coming decades if climate change continues to worsen.”

ELECTION 2024

— “After non-endorsement, Teamsters’ Sean O’Brien says Democrats have ‘taken the working men and women for granted,’” by Jon Chesto, The Boston Globe.

FROM THE 413

— “Council resolution would declare Northampton a transgender sanctuary city,” by Alexander MacDougall, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “The resolution, brought forward by Ward 2 Councilor Deborah Klemer and Ward 7 Councilor Rachel Maiore, would have Northampton commit to never using city resources for detaining persons for seeking or providing gender-affirming care, including affirmation surgery or hormone therapy; and would also commit to never cooperating with or providing information to individual or out-of-state agencies regarding any lawful gender-affirming care in Massachusetts.”

— “Community college faculty sound alarm on salaries,” by Alexa Lewis, Greenfield Recorder: “Without greater investment in salaries for faculty and staff at community colleges in Massachusetts, a free tuition program launched this summer to great fanfare may be ‘doomed to fail.’ That’s the alarm some education leaders are sounding as they call for better pay for faculty and staff that are struggling to make ends meet.”

— “The Clarksburg Police Department disbands as its chief, Michael Williams, retires,” by Jane Kaufman, The Berkshire Eagle. 

— “Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi arrested outside of MGM Springfield,” by Luis Fieldman, MassLive.

Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi was arrested outside of the MGM Springfield casino on Saturday and charged with a single count of operating under the influence, according to a spokesperson for Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s office.

Cocchi was released on personal recognizance and the attorney general’s office expects he will be arraigned in Springfield District Court on Monday morning.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Sudbury may be next Massachusetts town to take down ‘one-sided’ historical signs,” by Lance Reynolds, Boston Herald: “Sudbury is exploring whether it should become the next Massachusetts town to remove signs commemorating the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and if there’s a better way to present the complicated history.”

— “Brockton cop suspended after slamming into Jeep. Questions of cover-up hang over case,” by Chris Helms, The Brockton Enterprise: “Brockton's top cop suspended a sergeant without pay for three days after he rammed his SUV into a family's Jeep at the light in front of Brockton High School, totaling both vehicles. Sgt. Stanley David had at least three vodka tonics at a police fundraiser at Brockton Country Club and possibly another at Brack's Grille & Tap before he crashed on the way home, according to an internal affairs report made public Friday. A whistleblower emailed the city alleging that the officer was drunk and that local authorities tried to cover up the incident.”

— “School shooter drill readies first responders for the unthinkable. What they learned,” by Peter Blandino, The Patriot Ledger. 

SAGAMORE BRIDGE: WORTH READING!

— “What is the construction start date for Sagamore Bridge? Here's the latest,” by Zane Razzaq, Cape Cod Times.

IN MEMORIAM

‘HE LIVED AND BREATHED METHUEN’ — Tributes poured out over the weekend for Methuen Mayor Neil Perry, who died Saturday. He was 65.

"Mayor Perry has fought many health battles over the last several years but came back from each of them with renewed vigor to tackle, in his own words, the greatest job he ever had: being the mayor of the great City of Methuen," his office said in a statement Saturday night.

Perry, a Democrat, was sworn into office in 2020 and won his third term last year. He had been battling kidney disease leading up to his death, the Eagle Tribune’s Bill Kirk and Jill Harmacinski report .

Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll described Perry as a “wonderful and caring person, and a strong and courageous leader.”

“He loved Methuen deeply and was a steadfast advocate for the city and its families,” Sen. Ed Markey said on X .

Rep. Lori Trahan, whose district includes Methuen, said in a statement that she was “heartbroken” to hear of Perry’s passing. “He lived and breathed Methuen,” she said. “We will sorely miss his leadership, his determination, and his resilience, and my heart goes out to his family and friends mourning this tremendous loss.”

“Our Mayor gave his absolute all to our community — never wavering on his commitments — we will miss him very much,” wrote state Auditor Diana DiZoglio , whose district included Methuen when she served in the state House and Senate.

At-large City Councilor D.J. Beauregard will serve as acting mayor until a special election is held to fill the seat. That has to happen less than 60 days from now, per the city’s charter.

“Mayor Perry wasn’t just a close ally and mentor - he was my friend . I grieve for the loss our community faces, and I am saddened by the sudden loss of my dear friend,” Beauregard said in a statement. Beauregard previously served as acting mayor when Perry stepped away from office due to an undisclosed illness in February and March of 2023.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

TRANSITIONS — Outgoing state Rep. Sarah Peake is leaving her seat early to join the Healey administration as a senior advisor for intergovernmental affairs. She starts today. 

SPOTTED  — at a JP for Kamala Harris event Sunday evening that raised more than $100,000 for the campaign: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, former Rep. Barney Frank, Boston City Councilor Ben Weber, former Councilor Matt O’Malley, and state Reps. Samantha Montaño and Bill MacGregor.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY —  to Michael Falcone , president of Pearl Street Partners, and Joshua Foer. Happy belated to Tara Wilson of Sen. Ed Markey’s office, who celebrated Sunday.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how:  jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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