Opinion: Florida attorney general Ashley Moody must be a glutton for punishment
Opinion: Florida attorney general Ashley Moody must be a glutton for punishment
A surprising concession is buried in the latest filing from Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody's office in a federal lawsuit over Amendment 4, a proposed constitutional change that would reverse the state's six-week abortion ban: Despite threats from the Florida Department of Health of potential prosecution against TV stations that continue running a pro-Amendment 4 political ad, the agency "has disclaimed enforcement under the present circumstances," Moody's lawyers told U.S. District Judge Mark Walker.
Those are passive-voice weasel words designed to obscure a more humiliating truth: Prosecuting TV stations for the crime of running pro-Amendment 4 ads would be a stunning First Amendment violation, as Walker already acknowledged last week when he issued a restraining order against Florida officials to prevent them from even thinking about carrying through their strong-arm tactics. "To keep it simple for the State of Florida: its the First Amendment, stupid," Walker wrote.
The ad in question, called "Caroline" and sponsored by Floridians Protecting Freedom, features a Tampa woman relaying her story about the difficulties of obtaining a medically necessary abortion in Florida given the current six-week ban on the books.
Moody must be a glutton for punishment. Despite Walker's admonishment last week, her office filed a brief Tuesday that is filled with arguments Walker already shredded. Remarkably, her office's filing simultaneously defends the actions of Florida officials as lawful while to borrow her office's words disclaiming the underpinnings of the state's own argument.