that pretty much decided the title race.
Asked by justices including Kari Gray who should decide when human life begins, Jerde said the state Legislature as the elected body is “closest to the people.”But an attorney for those suing over Wyoming’s laws, Peter Modlin, argued that when life begins is a fundamentally religious question that government has no business putting into law.
“This is an ongoing political debate the state must not have any role in whatsoever,” Modlin said.And the laws harm girls and women, Modlin said, because complications make pregnancy and childbirth more than 50 times more dangerous than abortion.Modlin and two other attorneys including Marci Bramlet represent four women, including two obstetricians, and two nonprofits, including Casper abortion clinic Wellspring Health Access, in challenging the laws.
They violate equal protection between men and women under the law, Bramlet argued.“These bans force women to surrender their rights any time they are pregnant,” Bramlet said. “This state has never legislated away a man’s right to his health care decisions.”
The same nonprofits and women are suing to
passed by the Legislature last winter.In his subsequent follow-up, Glucksmann said that his call for Lady Liberty to travel back across the Atlantic to France had been intended as “a wake-up call.”
“We all in Europe love this nation to which we know we owe so much,” he posted. “It will rise again. You will rise again. We are counting on you.”AP journalist Zeke Miller contributed to this report from Washington.
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Making the trip from Vancouver to Seattle to watch baseball’s Toronto Blue Jays play the Mariners has been a tradition for Peter Mulholland and his wife, but not this year.Mulholland was already frustrated over U.S. President Donald Trump’s