State’s Bid to Cut Medicaid Funding to Planned Parenthood Hits Supreme Court

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times Header

The court’s ruling could deal a blow to the abortion provider or widespread efforts to strip its government funding.

The U.S. Supreme Court may have turned the page on its previous role in ruling on national abortion policy, but it appears that the justices will still have a prominent part to play in the next chapter.

On April 2, the court will hear a case that does not directly affect abortion law but could have significant implications for the nation’s largest abortion provider.

At the heart of the case is the question of whether federal law unambiguously bestows Medicaid patients with the right to choose a specific provider. Planned Parenthood and the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals say it does.

But the state of South Carolina, which bars taxpayer funding of abortion, says the law empowers states to decide which providers are qualified for Medicaid funding. South Carolina has asked the Supreme Court to step in.

Depending on how it’s decided, the case could deal a potentially fatal blow to Planned Parenthood or set back widespread efforts to defund the organization once and for all.

The Case

The case was prompted by South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster’s 2018 directive ordering the state’s health department to terminate all abortion providers from the Medicaid program. The order deemed all abortion clinics to be “unqualified” to provide family planning services.

Planned Parenthood South Atlantic and one of the affiliate’s Medicaid patients swiftly filed a federal lawsuit challenging the order.

At issue is a provision of the Social Security Amendments of 1965, also called the Medicare and Medicaid Act. The statute requires state Medicaid plans to “provide that any individual eligible for medical assistance … may obtain such assistance from any [provider] qualified to perform the service or services required … who undertakes to provide him such services.”

Planned Parenthood holds that verbiage grants Medicaid beneficiaries the right to receive care from the qualified and willing provider of their choice.

The district and appeals courts both agreed, finding that the law “unambiguously [creates] a right privately enforceable” under a civil rights statute.

By Samantha Flom

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Stirring the gravy

“You might be a Pennsylvanian-Italian if you claim Italian ancestry and participated in San Marziale festivities at Holy Angels Church in Kulpmont, PA.

Flood of Lies

The tragedy still unfolding after the historic Texas floods should be cause for unity, but Democrats weaponize the catastrophe for themselves.

Now Lawyers Are Looking for the Epstein List, Too!

So it turns out that when FBI Director Kash...

Remember Epstein’s “Little Black Books”?

Image of Bill Clinton getting a massage from Jeffrey...

On the Major League’s periphery: A major trip through the minors

For Nick Dunn, the trek through the minors is a trifecta of physical, mental, and organizational hurdles filled with politics, roster volatility, and injuries.

Hackers Target Apple’s Mac Users With New Malware Hidden in Popular Apps

MacOS malware, ZuRu is targeting Apple users, embedding malicious code and a hacking tool into popular utilities used for remote connections and server management.

Fetterman Backs ICE, Calls Abolition Push ‘Outrageous’

Sen. Fetterman voiced support for ICE, calling demands to dismantle the agency “inappropriate and outrageous.”

DOJ Shuts Down Investigation on T-Mobile-UScellular Merger

DOJ no longer opposes the merger of T-Mobile and UScellular and has closed its investigation into the matter, the department said in a July 10 statement.

Trump Visits Central Texas, Epicenter of Catastrophic Flood That Killed More Than 120

President Trump landed in Central Texas for first-hand look at damage from devastating flood claiming the lives of more than 120 people statewide.

Trump Announces 30 Percent Tariff on EU, Mexico

President Donald Trump has announced a 30 percent tariff on imports from the European Union and Mexico, to go into effect on Aug. 1, 2025.

Tariff Windfall Drives Surprise $27 Billion US Budget Surplus in June

New data from Treasury Dept show that surging tariff revenues in June helped U.S. government post an unexpected budget surplus of $27 billion.

State Department Says Reorganization Plan to Move Ahead Quickly After Supreme Court Ruling

State Dept to reorganize plans following Supreme Court's allowing Trump admin to proceed with layoffs of fed workers and overhaul of federal agencies.

Trump Says US Has Struck Deal With NATO to Supply Weapons to Ukraine

President Donald Trump said on July 10 that he has struck a new deal with NATO under which the United States will supply weapons to Ukraine
spot_img

Related Articles