Doe v. Gomez: 15 years of
state-sponsored abortion
MN Supreme Supreme
Court's abortion-on-demand decision costs taxpayers $15 million
for abortions
Part Two of Three
Editor's note. The
following comes from Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life---MCCL--National
Right to Life's Minnesota affiliate.
ST. PAUL -- More than
50,000 unborn babies have been killed in Minnesota with taxpayer
funds since a Dec. 15, 1995, Minnesota Supreme Court ruling
required taxpayers to fund abortions, according to the Minnesota
Department of Human Services (MDHS). The Doe v. Gomez ruling
established the most extreme abortion-on-demand policy in the
nation.
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Scott Fischbach, executive director,
Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life
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"The Doe v. Gomez ruling
by a handful of extremist judges has been disastrous for
Minnesota women and their babies," said Scott Fischbach,
Executive Director of Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life (MCCL).
"On this 15th anniversary of the decision, Minnesotans continue
to believe it is not the mission of the state to abort thousands
of innocent unborn children each year, yet that is exactly what
is happening under this radical ruling."
The Supreme Court's Doe v.
Gomez decision established a new state constitutional "right" to
abortion on demand. This supposed right would remain protected
by the state Constitution even if Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision
legalizing abortion in the United States, were to be overturned
by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Doe v. Gomez allows
abortions for reasons such as "stress" or "discomfort." It
forbids the state to "interfere" in any way with a woman's
"decision-making" about abortion. Doe v. Gomez also obligates
the state--and thus, taxpayers--to pay for abortions, something
not required by the U.S. Supreme Court.
From June 1994 through
2008, state taxpayers paid more than $15.6 million for 50,869
abortions, according to MDHS. In 2008 alone (the most recent
statistics available), state taxpayers paid $1.5 million for
3,754 abortions.
The state does not report
how many women have died from these abortions.
While the total number of
abortions in the state is declining slightly, taxpayer funding
of abortions has risen nearly every year since 1995. Minnesota
taxpayers now pay for almost 30 percent of all abortions
performed in the state.
"This is not the will of
the majority of Minnesotans, who oppose abortion on demand, and
it is not the function of state government to fund the
destruction of its most powerless innocent citizens," Fischbach
said. "The Court took away the people's right to decide whether
they want abortion on demand in the state and whether they
should be required to pay for others' elective abortions. It's
time for change in Minnesota."
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Part Two |