More than 50 Texas Democrats and abortion rights groups, including former Texas state senator Wendy Davis and Planned Parenthood Advocates of Texas, on Saturday urging President Joe Biden to safeguard abortion access for Texans seeking care in and out of the state.
Biden signed an on Monday that requires hospitals to provide abortion care if the mother鈥檚 life is at risk. The guidance states federal law preempts state bans on abortion.
Greg Casar, a former Austin city council member and the Democratic candidate for Texas鈥 35th Congressional district, said Texans need more.
鈥淲e appreciate the steps the administration has taken,鈥 Casar said. 鈥淭here are other steps that Texans in crisis need right now.鈥
The letter, which the Texas Newsroom obtained on Friday, outlines steps to protect all Texans who access abortion care. That includes those who travel out of state and people who get a prescription for the abortion pill through telehealth while still in state.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is over its executive order on abortion. The Texas Democrats who signed the letter are calling on Biden and the Justice Department to safeguard those who leave the state to get an abortion and the providers who assist them from similar civil or criminal actions.
But Davis said there are many people in Texas who don鈥檛 have the means or privilege to travel 鈥 she spoke of a patient who told an abortion clinic that even if the clinic chartered a private jet, she wouldn鈥檛 be able to leave the state.
鈥淭hat is the reality for so many people in our state who have jobs that they cannot leave, have children that they can't find alternative care for,鈥 Davis said.
That鈥檚 why Davis said there needs to be federal protections for medication abortion so Texans can still get care without crossing state lines. To do this, the Biden administration would declare a public health emergency to protect providers who prescribe the abortion pill via telehealth.
Davis said Biden should also establish a program for federal healthcare employees and contractors to prescribe the medication. The Hyde Amendment prohibits the federal government from funding most abortions, but the letter argues there鈥檚 a way around that 鈥 let the federal providers volunteer their time to give out pills paid for by donations.
Texas Democrats also argue in the letter that the state鈥檚 abortion law banning the medication conflicts with federal law. The abortion pill has FDA approval, so Democrats say that federal authorization should override state law.
Still, Davis said the actions outlined in this letter are a temporary solution 鈥 the ultimate goal is to codify the right to an abortion legally.
鈥淭his is what we have to do in the meantime,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd it matters that we do it because women in Texas and in other states where abortion is illegal, we can't wait for that kind of a long-term solution. We need help now.鈥