Gov. Ron DeSantis is joining the chorus of conservatives criticizing the use of gender-neutral terms like âbirthing peopleâ when describing pregnancies.
The national debate on abortion spawned a secondary front in the culture war in recent weeks as some on the left ditched phrases like âpregnant mothersâ in an effort to be more inclusive to transgender men and nonbinary people.
In outlining President Joe Bidenâs budget proposal for the 2022 fiscal year more than a year ago, the administration swapped references to âmothersâ with âbirthing people,â drawing criticism. And last month, in anticipation of the U.S. Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups used gender-neutral language when describing abortion, flaring the topic back up.
Speaking in Putnam County on Wednesday, Floridaâs Republican Governor took the opportunity to opine on gender-neutral language when asked about implementing stricter anti-abortion laws.
âSome of the people in Washington, like, can we actually agree that women get pregnant and not men? Because they donât seem to say that,â DeSantis said. âItâs just unbelievable, some of the stuff that youâre hearing about that.â
The Governor has made a point to combat âwokeâ culture. Last year, he signed legislation banning transgender women and girls from competing in womenâs and girlsâ sports. And in April, he signed what he called the âStop WOKE Actâ (HB 7) to prohibit lessons and training which tell students and employees that they are inherently racist, sexist or oppressive because of their race, color, sex or national origin.
He has also derided âwokeâ corporations like Disney, which came out against Floridaâs law restricting discussions about gender and sexual identity by teachers.
DeSantis in April signed a 15-week abortion ban (HB 5) into law, which Florida Republicans based on similar Mississippi legislation that the U.S. Supreme Court upheld 6-3 in Dobbs v. Jackson Womenâs Health Organization. But by a slimmer 5-4 margin, a majority of the Court also overturned Roe v. Wade, opening the possibility for Florida and other states to enact stricter laws.
However, the Florida Constitution directly outlines a right to privacy, which the Florida Supreme Court has previously ruled includes the right to abortion for up to 24 weeks of pregnancy. Republicans and the DeSantis administration expect litigation over the 15-week law to make its way to the state Supreme Court, where they hope Justices will overturn the state right to abortions.
DeSantis called the 15-week abortion ban the âbest pro-life legislationâ Florida has seen in decades.
âBasically weâve had, for many decades now, very radical state-level judicial decisions that really makes us closer to China and North Korea when it comes to being very radical with abortion policy, and so thatâs not the appropriate thing for courts to be imposing on the state of Florida,â DeSantis said.
The DeSantis administration appealed a lower courtâs ruling that initially ruled the abortion ban unconstitutional. The Governor expects an appellate court to advance the case soon, and the next question is whether the Florida Supreme Court will take the case.
âI think that they probably will, because I think this is a really important thing for them to decide,â DeSantis said.
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