logo
Lawsuit filed by 17 states against abortion accommodations in the workplace can proceed

Lawsuit filed by 17 states against abortion accommodations in the workplace can proceed

A lawsuit filed by 17 states challenging federal rules entitling workers to time off and other accommodations for abortions may proceed, a federal appeals court ruled.
The Eighth Circuit Court's decision on Thursday reverses Eastern District of Arkansas U.S. District Judge D.P. Marshall, Jr.'s dismissal of the case in June after he found that the states lacked standing to sue. Eighth Circuit Chief Judge Steven M. Colloton, who was appointed by former President George W. Bush in 2003, wrote in Thursday's opinion that the states do have standing since they are subject to the federal rules.
Led by Republican state attorneys general in Tennessee and Arkansas, the 17 states sued the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in April challenging its rules on how to implement the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, a 2022 bipartisan law requiring employers to make 'reasonable accommodations' for pregnant or postpartum employees.
In addition to more routine pregnancy workplace accommodations like time off for prenatal appointments, more bathroom breaks, or permission to carry snacks, the rules say that workers can ask for time off to obtain an abortion and recover from the procedure.
'The Biden-era EEOC's attempt to turn a good law into an ideological weapon to force broad elective abortion accommodations is illegal,' Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said in an emailed statement. 'The EEOC's unlawful regulations undermine the constitutional authority of the people's elected representatives and we are vindicated by the Court's decision to let our suit proceed.'
The lawsuit — joined by state attorneys in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah and West Virginia — is one of several legal challenges to the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act rules. One case in Texas seeks to overturn the law in its entirety.
The Eighth Circuit Court's decision to revive the case comes after a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court ruling opened the door to state abortion bans, and as bills to track and charge women who get abortions with murder have gotten attention in Missouri, North Dakota and Oklahoma state legislatures this month.
The EEOC, which enforces U.S. anti-discrimination laws, during former President Joe Biden's administration published regulations that provide guidance for employers and workers on how to implement the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act. In them, the agency said that workers can ask for time off to obtain an abortion and recover from the procedure, along with pregnancy-related medical conditions like miscarriage, stillbirth and lactation. Citing numerous court rulings, the EEOC in its regulations said it was conforming to decades of legal precedent establishing that pregnancy-related discrimination laws include abortion.
But many Republican lawmakers, including Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy, who co-sponsored the bill, were furious when the EEOC stated that the law covered abortions. Both Republican EEOC commissioners voted against the rules at the time.
A spokesperson for the EEOC said the agency will 'refrain from discussing litigation' but referred The Associated Press to Acting Chair Andrea Lucas' position on the Commission's PWFA regulations, which she voted against.
'I support elements of the final rule. However, I am unable to approve it because it purports to broaden the scope of the statute in ways that, in my view, cannot reasonably be reconciled with the text,' she wrote in a statement at the time explaining her decision to vote against the rules.
The EEOC has undergone significant change since President Donald Trump took office last month. After naming Lucas, a Republican, as acting chair, Trump fired two Democratic commissioners of the five-member bipartisan EEOC before their terms expired in an unprecedented move. Had the commissioners been allowed to carry out their terms, the EEOC would have had a Democratic majority well into Trump's term. The administration also dismissed Karla Gilbride as the EEOC's general counsel, replacing her with Andrew Rogers as acting counsel.
Without a quorum, the EEOC cannot rescind its own rules, although Lucas in the statement said she intends for the EEOC to reconsider portions of the rules she believes are unsupported by law once a quorum is re-established.
The Department of Justice represents the EEOC in court, and under Trump, it remains to be seen whether it will continue to fight the states' lawsuit.
Inimai Chettiar, president of advocacy group A Better Balance, which spearheaded a decade-long campaign for the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and filed an amicus brief in support of the EEOC alongside National Women's Law Center, American Civil Liberties Union, and several more organizations, on Thursday called the Eighth Circuit Court's decision 'an attack on reproductive choice.'
'Workers in need of an abortion should not be discriminated against or forced off the job because of a need for vital health care,' she said.
With Lucas' stated intention to alter the PWFA rules, the existing lawsuits against them, the EEOC firings and the DOJ changing hands under the new presidential administration, 'things are moving pretty fast and we're very concerned about what's going to happen to the PWFA regulations specifically that cover abortion,' Chettiar said. She emphasized that for the vast majority of Americans, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act is still the law of the land, and the EEOC's regulations remain in effect.
'This law is still on the books, the regulation is still on the books. Women still have access to all of these accommodations and they can call our free legal helpline if they need more clarification,' she said.
_____
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

As Waltz faces UN post hearings, an update on the Signal situation that led to his initial ousting
As Waltz faces UN post hearings, an update on the Signal situation that led to his initial ousting

Washington Post

time10 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

As Waltz faces UN post hearings, an update on the Signal situation that led to his initial ousting

As Mike Waltz , President Donald Trump's nominee for U.S. ambassador to the United Nations , appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday for his confirmation hearing, focus returns to his ousting as national security adviser over what some referred to as 'Signalgate.' The former Florida Republican congressman served mere weeks in Trump's administration before revelations that he mistakenly added journalist Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic to a private Signal chat that was used to discuss sensitive military plans , including planning for strikes on Houthi militants in Yemen.

House Democrats strain to corner Republicans on Jeffrey Epstein
House Democrats strain to corner Republicans on Jeffrey Epstein

Politico

time11 minutes ago

  • Politico

House Democrats strain to corner Republicans on Jeffrey Epstein

Senate Majority Leader John Thune says he will bring the first procedural vote to the floor Tuesday on the White House's request to claw back $9.4 billion in spending. It's not clear he has even the 51 votes necessary to start debate on the package. Congress needs to approve the request before it expires Friday, or the administration will have to spend the money as lawmakers originally intended. That deadline is looming large as several GOP senators insist the administration clarify what spending it is actually seeking to rescind. They'll question President Donald Trump's budget director Russ Vought during senators' closed-door lunch Tuesday afternoon. 'We still are lacking the level of detail that is needed to make the right decisions,' Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins told reporters Monday evening. 'It's extremely unusual for any senator to not be able to get that kind of detailed information.' The Maine Republican is concerned not just over the administration's proposal to scale down the global AIDS-fighting program PEPFAR, but also about broader cutbacks in overseas public health. Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) told POLITICO he's particularly interested in protecting funding for global food aid programs like Food for Peace and the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program. It's increasingly evident the rescissions package will have to be changed in order to pass the Senate, and Thune told reporters as he left the Capitol on Monday that leadership is working with wary senators to 'see what a path forward on amendments looks like.' Senate leaders expect a vote-a-rama on amendments to start Wednesday, teeing up a final vote late Wednesday or early Thursday. If senators are able to advance a package with tweaks, House GOP leaders plan to put the package on the floor Thursday; they have already started to clear away procedural hurdles that would prevent them from passing the spending cut proposal ASAP. Throwing another wrinkle into it all, though, is that House GOP leaders don't want the Senate amending the package at all, knowing their members will be jammed with changes they don't like and be forced to choose between passing a watered-down product or missing the deadline to act. 'I think you got to respect the White House's request, and that's what we did, so I hope that's what we get back,' Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters Monday. 'There are two big categories of rescissions, and I'm not sure either of them should be subject to dispute.' It's also unclear whether an amended rescissions package would even have the support in the Republican House. Fiscal hawks are already drawing red lines, with Rep. Ralph Norman (R-S.C.) going as far as telling POLITICO he won't support a rescissions package that is 'a penny less' than the House-approved version. MEANWHILE, IN OTHER FUNDING FIGHTS — Senate appropriators remain at a standstill on moving a funding bill forward for the Commerce and Justice departments. They're trying to schedule a briefing with the FBI on the administration's rationale for abandoning the plan to move the bureau to suburban Maryland, according to Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), whose stand against Trump's desire for a site in the District of Columbia derailed a markup of the bill last week. But Van Hollen insists that even if the FBI assures senators that the Washington location is a secure site, he won't back off his attempt to block the administration from diverting about $1.4 billion that has been set aside for relocating the agency's campus to Maryland. Across the Capitol: House Appropriations Chair Tom Cole said that House leaders began whipping votes Monday night as the chamber prepares to take its vote on the $831.5 billion defense appropriations bill later this week. While defense appropriations bills have been bipartisan in the past, Republicans are expecting this measure to be a largely party-line affair. What else we're watching: — Epstein meltdown: We'll see if Republican leaders' headache from their members over the DOJ's failure to release files related to Jeffrey Epstein continues. Rep. Norman voted Monday in favor of a Democratic amendment in the House Rules Committee that would have forced a floor vote on the DOJ releasing more materials from the federal case. — Russia sanctions timeline: The bipartisan Russian sanctions bill might stall in the House and Senate after Trump announced secondary tariffs on countries trading with Russia. Thune said Monday he would hold off on advancing the bill for now. House Majority Leader Steve Scalise also said a vote could be delayed to post-August recess. — Dems' last stand against a controversial Trump pick: Senate Democrats are making a final bid to draw the spotlight to a whistleblower's allegations that Emil Bove, a top Justice Department official and 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals nominee, urged defiance of the same judicial branch he is seeking to join. Democrats want the whistleblower, Erez Reuveni, to testify before senators prior to their confirmation vote on Bove, which is set for Thursday morning. Jordain Carney, Katherine Tully-McManus, Jennifer Scholtes, Meredith Lee Hill and Cassandra Dumay contributed to this report.

The Democrats' next test will feature these three Arizona candidates
The Democrats' next test will feature these three Arizona candidates

CNN

time21 minutes ago

  • CNN

The Democrats' next test will feature these three Arizona candidates

The next test of who Democratic voters want to see leading the party will take place Tuesday in southwest Arizona, where three leading candidates are offering competing visions in the primary to fill the late Rep. Raul Grijalva's seat. The candidates have all painted themselves as fighters focused on protecting programs that would see cuts under Republicans' sweeping domestic policy and immigration law. But the primary has also highlighted questions about age, generational change and the power of a famous last name. Adelita Grijalva, a former Pima County supervisor and the late congressman's daughter, is pitching herself as an experienced continuation of his progressive legacy. Former state Rep. Daniel Hernandez is running as a pragmatist who's managed to pass legislation under Republican majorities. And 25-year-old activist Deja Foxx argues her lived experience and youth make her the best suited to bring new urgency to Washington. Hernandez has led fundraising, but Grijalva and Foxx have remained competitive. Two other Democratic primary candidates, businessman Patrick Harris Sr. and Indigenous scholar Jose Malvido Jr., have not submitted Federal Election Commission reports. Arizona's 7th Congressional District, which includes parts of Tucson and most of the state's southern border with Mexico, has been without representation since March, when Rep. Grijalva died due to complications from cancer treatments. The late congressman and former Congressional Progressive Caucus chairman was first elected to the House in 2002. Polls close at 7 p.m. Tuesday local time (10 p.m. ET). Whoever wins the Democratic primary will be heavily favored to win the September 23 general election. Here's a closer look at the leading Democratic candidates: The 54-year-old Grijalva entered the race as the front-runner and has garnered the lion's share of endorsements in the contest, including support from both of Arizona's US senators as well as Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. She's also benefited from her family's longstanding recognition in the district, saying she would continue her father's legacy. Like her father, Grijalva served on the Tucson Unified School District governing board and the Pima County Board of Supervisors before running for Congress. She has pushed back on her opponents' efforts to frame her as the establishment candidate, saying that she applied for and earned her endorsements from various groups and has her own record of advocacy work, including running diversion programs while working at Pima County's Teen Court. Foxx acknowledges this is her first political run. She has built her campaign around her backstory as a Tucson native who worked at a gas station as a teenager and was raised by a single mother who relied on Medicaid, food stamps and Section 8 housing. She points to those experiences to argue she has lived the policies lawmakers debate in Washington. The 25-year-old has also highlighted her decade of experience as an activist. She is best known for confronting former Sen. Jeff Flake, an Arizona Republican, at a town hall over Planned Parenthood funding. Foxx has also worked as a reproductive rights activist and an influencer backing Vice President Kamala Harris' 2019 presidential campaign. Hernandez has framed himself as a more centrist alternative to Foxx and Grijalva. While his more progressive opponents have backed 'Medicare for All,' he has said he would defend Medicare and Medicaid. He has also supported mining projects in the district that other candidates have opposed. He's argued that while some Democrats use being in the political minority as an excuse to not get legislation passed, he was able to get policies enacted during his six years in the state House under a Republican Legislature and governor. Hernandez previously ran in the 6th Congressional District in 2022 but lost the Democratic primary to Kirsten Engel. The 35-year-old has also done Latino outreach for Planned Parenthood, served as the Arizona state director for Everytown for Gun Safety and served on the Sunnyside Unified School District governing board. In 2011, Hernandez was working as an intern for then-Rep. Gabby Giffords when she was shot at a constituent meeting in Tucson. He provided first aid to the congresswoman before emergency services arrived.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store