Judge rejects a challenge to Michigan's decades-long ban on publicly funded abortions
DETROIT, MI - JUNE 24: A flag spray painted with Defend Abortion hangs on a fence outside where abortion rights activists gather to protest the Supreme Court's decision in the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health case on June 24, 2022 in Detroit, Michigan. The Court's decision in the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health case overturns the landmark 50-year-old Roe v Wade case, removing a federal right to an abortion. Source: (Photo by Emily Elconin/Getty Images)

Judge rejects a challenge to Michigan's decades-long ban on publicly funded abortions

Ed White READ TIME: 1 MIN.

DETROIT (AP) — A judge has rejected a challenge to Michigan's longtime ban on taxpayer-funded abortions for low-income residents, saying a group that brought the lawsuit had no standing to file it.

Michigan voters in 2022 approved a sweeping constitutional amendment ensuring a right to abortion. But a ban on most taxpayer-funded abortions has been in place for decades, no matter which political party has controlled the Legislature or the governor’s office.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of YWCA Kalamazoo, which pays for abortions sought by women in southwestern Michigan. The group says more than 75% have incomes that would qualify them for state support if Medicaid-funded abortions were allowed.

Judge Brock Swartzle of the Michigan Court of Claims dismissed the lawsuit on July 3, saying YWCA Kalamazoo was the wrong party to bring a challenge.

“The YWCA is not an individual and it, as a nonprofit organization, does not have reproductive freedom,” the judge said in an 18-page opinion. “Further, the YWCA does not provide abortion care and is not directly affected by a law that denies funding for abortions.”

Michigan’s Medicaid program only pays for abortions to save a woman’s life or to end pregnancies resulting from rape or incest.

Abortion and related services are available through Medicaid in 17 states, according to the American Civil Liberties Union and the law firm Goodwin Procter, which both represent YWCA Kalamazoo.

A request for comment from the ACLU was not immediately answered Thursday.


by Ed White

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