Portland City Council to vote on ending trade and travel with Texas in response to abortion restrictions

Authored by opb.org and submitted by ladyem8

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler announced on Friday that Portland City Council will vote on an emergency resolution on Wednesday with the intent to ban city business and employee travel related to the state of Texas.

The resolution was made in response to the state’s recent abortion laws that greatly restrict access to the procedure. In a statement from the city of Portland, the law was called unconstitutional.

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If passed, the ban will continue until the state of Texas withdraws the abortion law or until it is overturned in court. City legal counsel is currently evaluating the legal aspects of this proposed resolution.

The Portland City Council said in a statement, “It stands unified in its belief that all people should have the right to choose if and when they carry a pregnancy and that the decisions they make are complex, difficult, and unique to their circumstances.”

Nearly 50 years ago, the Supreme Court ruled to protect safe, legal abortion in the famous Roe v. Wade case. Late Wednesday night, the Supreme Court declined to block a Texas law banning abortions after only 6 weeks of pregnancy. This 5-4 decision allows Texas to outlaw an estimated 85% of all abortion procedures in the state.

The City of Portland expressed disapproval of the law saying it does not demonstrate concern for the health, safety and well-being of those who may become pregnant; it does not recognize or show respect for the human rights of those who may become pregnant; It violates the separation of church and state; and it will force people to carry pregnancies against their will.

“We stand with Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Elena Kagan, Justice Stephen Breyer, and Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who fought to block this attack on the reproductive rights, freedom, and autonomy of people across the country,” said the statement.

The statement urged other leaders and elected bodies around the nation to condemn the actions of the Texas state government.

LevPornass on September 5th, 2021 at 04:08 UTC »

In all seriousness, a lot of people could be sued for aiding and abetting an abortion by doing business in Texas. Uber and Lyft can be sued if they are providing rides to clinics, companies that manufacture products that might be used in any type of abortion could get sued, social media companies like Reddit could get sued if people are using the platform to coordinate abortions.

We don’t know how the Texas courts will interpret the new law. It is best to avoid Texas right now to avoid bullshit lawsuits.

Squidwards-the-goat on September 5th, 2021 at 01:06 UTC »

I live in Indiana. Before Pence became VP he was the Governor. He backed a strong anti-gay law. The reaction was shift. Among other things Indianapolis was set to host the men’s final four. The NCAA immediately said if this law takes effect we’re moving the final four. I’m sure Pence’s office received tons of phone calls from businesses etc. Things changed with the law in a hurry. Bottom line is these things can make a difference.

madogvelkor on September 4th, 2021 at 21:15 UTC »

This will probably make Texas happy.