Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer Sues to Create Right to Kill Babies in Abortions

State   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Apr 7, 2022   |   9:49AM   |   Lansing, Michigan

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer is a longtime abortion activist and today she filed a lawsuit to try to get the Michigan Supreme Court to create a right to kill babies in aboritons.

Whitmer says she is concerned the U.S. Supreme Court will overturn Roe v. Wade, so she wants the state’s highest court to create a right to abortion under the Michigan’s Constitution.

“In the coming weeks, we will learn if the U.S. Supreme Court decides to overturn Roe v. Wade,” said Governor Whitmer. “If Roe is overturned, abortion could become illegal in Michigan in nearly any circumstance—including in cases of rape and incest— and deprive Michigan women of the ability to make critical health care decisions for themselves. This is no longer theoretical: it is reality. That’s why I am filing a lawsuit and using my executive authority to urge the Michigan Supreme Court to immediately resolve whether Michigan’s state constitution protects the right to abortion.”

Michigan has an old law protecting babies from aboritons that could be enforced when the U.S. Supreme Court overturns roe, which it could possibly do this summer in the Dobbs case. Whitmer’s lawsuit asks the Michigan Supreme Court to recognize a constitutional right to an abortion under the Due Process Clause of the Michigan Constitution, as well as asks the court to stop enforcement of the 1931 Michigan abortion ban.

The due process clause of the U.S. Constitution is meant to protect people’s lives not to enable abortionists to kill babies.

Roe made the Michigan law unconstitutional and its reversal would allow for the renewed protection of women and unborn babies.

The defendants in the case are prosecutors in 13 counties where abortion businesses are located.

Whitmer lawsuit coincides with a state ballot initiative abortion activists have filed that would keep abortion on demand legal even if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade. Planned Parenthood and other groups behind the campaign said they want to amend the Michigan Constitution to “explicitly affirm” a right to abortion.

Follow LifeNews.com on Instagram for pro-life pictures and videos.

“We are exploring a ballot measure that would preserve every individual’s constitutional right to make the very personal decision about reproductive health care, including abortion …” said Nicole Walls Stallworth, executive director of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Michigan.

The pro-abortion groups need to collect more than 425,000 valid signatures from state residents in order for the proposed amendment to be placed on the 2022 ballot. Behind the pro-abortion proposal are the American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, Planned Parenthood Advocates of Michigan and Michigan Voices.

“If a majority of voters vote yes, all of Michigan’s pro-life laws could be repealed,” Christen Pollo, executive director of Protect Life Michigan, warned in an email to supporters. “Every pro-life law in Michigan would be undone. Every unborn life would be left unprotected.”

Pro-life groups promised to work hard to stop the radical pro-abortion amendment from being ratified.

“We cannot allow the vulnerable to be killed in the name of convenience,” said Barbara Listing, president of Right to Life of Michigan. “The humanity of unborn children cannot be denied, as technology and science have proven, without a doubt, that they are human and deserve legal protection.”

Rebecca Mastee, a policy advocate for the Michigan Catholic Conference, told the Detroit News that the amendment would hurt women, too.

“[This is] a sad commentary on the outsized and harmful role the abortion industry plays in our politics and state,” Mastee said. “For decades, abortion has been touted as the only option, harmless and easy, yet we know this is a lie. Abortion hurts women.”

Both pro-life and pro-abortion groups are preparing for the very real possibility that the Supreme Court may overturn Roe and allow states to protect unborn babies from abortion again. In December, the justices heard a major abortion case out of Mississippi that directly challenges Roe. A ruling is expected in June.

If Roe goes, states will be allowed to protect unborn babies from abortion, and experts estimate as many as 26 states would do so. As a result, hundreds of thousands of babies could be spared from violent abortion deaths every year across America.

Polls consistently show that a majority of Americans support stronger legal protections for unborn babies than what Roe allows, and many support heartbeat laws that protect unborn babies at their earliest stage of life.