Waskom.
Naples. Joaquin. Tenaha. Rusk. Gary. Wells. These names might sound unfamiliar
now, but you’ll be hearing more about them soon enough.

They
are seven cities in East Texas that, within the last several months, each
passed so-called “sanctuary city for the unborn” ordinances — moves that are
blatantly unconstitutional.

Waskom, Texas was the first municipality to pass such an ordinance in July 2019. Soon after, other east Texas cities followed suit. The ordinances attempt to ban abortion within the cities if Roe v. Wade is overturned, and some of them even try to ban emergency contraception.

The ordinances also declare organizations working to protect the right to abortion, including our clients Lilith Fund and Texas Equal Access Fund (TEA Fund), as “criminal organizations,” even though they have done absolutely nothing wrong. The ordinances function to silence abortion advocates, preventing them from operating and even speaking about abortion access within the city limits.

These ordinances constitute an outright attack on abortion and free speech, which is why today we filed a lawsuit against these seven cities.

The
laws that claim abortion will be illegal if Roe
is overturned have a dangerous chilling effect. They confuse residents
about their rights and increase stigma against people who have abortions — even
though abortion remains legal in Texas and everywhere in the country. And at
the same time, the ordinances prevent any attempts to clear up that confusion,
banning the kind of speech that could educate people about their rights and
access to abortion in the cities.

Under
these local laws, our clients cannot speak up about abortion rights, recruit volunteers
to help them do their important work, or congregate to share informational
materials in these cities without worrying about getting sued. The laws
intentionally and unconstitutionally obstruct our plaintiffs’ ability to do
their jobs, impeding the advocacy work that is integral to their mission.

In
contrast, anti-abortion organizations face no such restrictions, remaining free
to undermine access to reproductive health care without legal ramifications.
It’s this targeted and discriminatory suppression of speech and assembly that
violates our clients’ First Amendment rights — and exactly what we are
challenging in our lawsuit.

Like most Americans, the majority of Texans believe that abortion should remain legal. Regardless of the efforts of anti-abortion extremists who are trying their best to spread their ideology across Texas — in some cases, going so far as to pressure town leadership to pass copycat anti-abortion ordinances — abortion remains a right.

So,
we’ll see the cities of Waskom, Naples, Joaquin, Tenaha, Rusk, Gary, and Wells
in court. Abortion is health care, and the organizations that advocate for it
should not be silenced.