Texas
Related: About this forumTexas lawmakers want to close 'bypass' for teen abortions
AUSTIN, Texas Texas, like many other conservative states, has strived to make it difficult for women to have abortions. Recent state laws have forced dozens of clinics to close and left some regions without a place for women to go.
But Texas has one option that makes abortions relatively accessible, and that between 300 and 500 pregnant teenagers use every year. Instead of seeking parental consent to terminate a pregnancy, girls younger than 18 can ask a court for approval under legal conditions less stringent than in many other states.
About 20 percent of the abortions performed on minors in Texas in 2013 came through this court process, about double the proportion elsewhere.
Soon, though, the so-called "judicial bypass" may become less accommodating.
Conservatives are now targeting the teenage cases as part of their latest legislative assault on abortion. New bills introduced in the current session would make it harder for girls to prove they shouldn't have to seek parental permission and more difficult for courts to give approval.
Read more: http://www.statesman.com/ap/ap/texas/texas-lawmakers-want-to-close-bypass-for-teen-abor/nkndy/
jmowreader
(52,992 posts)...if the legislatures in the red states spent on job creation even one-half the time they spend on abortion restrictions.
misterhighwasted
(9,148 posts)I cant think of any way to break the "boys only club" of the Red States.
They have legislated themselves into a position that protects their members above all else.
Equality in Texas is hanging by one thin thread.
So sad .
Glad you call them out to the ears of the world because Tx exclusive boys club would prefer no one knew what they truly do.
