In Northland Family Planning Center v. Nessel, (MI Ct. Cl., June 25, 2024), the Michigan Court of Claims issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement of three restrictions on abortion procedures found in Michigan law. The enjoined provisions impose a 24-hour mandatory waiting period, require a uniform informed consent for women seeking an abortion, and bar advanced practice clinicians from performing abortions. The court held that the provisions are unconstitutional under a state constitutional amendment adopted by referendum in 2022 which grants every individual a fundamental right to reproductive freedom and provides that an "individual’s right to reproductive freedom shall not be denied, burdened, nor infringed upon unless justified by a compelling state interest achieved by the least restrictive means." The court said in part:
... [T]he Court is convinced that the [24-hour] mandatory delay exacerbates the burdens that patients experience seeking abortion care, including by increasing costs, prolonging wait times, increasing the risk that a patient will have to disclose their decision to others, and potentially preventing a patient from having the type of abortion that they prefer....
The informed-consent provisions, read as whole, are designed to force a patient to consider the alternative of not having an abortion. The manner in which the information is presented is not neutral; it is designed to eschew abortion in favor of completing a pregnancy. This forced deliberation, through the mandatory informed-consent process, burdens and infringes upon a patient’s right to make and effectuate decisions about abortion care. The State is metaphorically putting its finger on the scale, thereby infringing upon a patient’s deliberative process.
The court however refused to enjoin provisions calling for oral counseling against coercion and providing resources to victims of domestic violence. Bridge Michigan reports on the decision.