A series of court decisions invoking the First Amendment to protect the abortion industry have elicited controversy as courts have become increasingly aggressive in handing down injunctions for laws restricting access to abortion.
On Monday, Boston U.S. district judge Indira Talwani extended an injunction to block a measure defunding Planned Parenthood.
The measure to defund Planned Parenthood for one year was signed into law by President Donald Trump on July 4th as part of the ‘Big Beautiful Bill’.
Talwani believes Planned Parenthood’s argument that cutting its Medicaid funding will restrict its right to ‘advocate’ for abortion, which would violate the First Amendment, is likely to succeed on its merits.
The ruling was quick to elicit outrage from pro-life activists and politicians, who were vexed at Talwani’s invocation of the First Amendment to shield Planned Parenthood clinics from being defunded.
While Talwani’s ruling prevents the federal government from defunding some Planned Parenthood clinics, clinics that provide abortions and clinics that receive more than $800,000 in federal funds will still be prevented from receiving Medicaid reimbursements.
In another ruling issued this week, a judge permanently blocked a Tennessee law that made it a felony to recruit a minor to get an illegal abortion without their parents knowledge or consent.
The ruling resulted from a 2024 lawsuit from a Tennessee State Representative and a family law attorney who argued that the law “is an unconstitutional restriction on their free speech.”
Congressional Republicans have grown increasingly frustrated with district courts who issue universal injunctions to block provisions of the Big Beautiful Bill and President Trump’s executive orders, and some have weighed limiting their powers in addition to a recent Supreme Court ruling that did the same.