This past weekend Jindal
issued a veto of the bill by state Rep. Joe Lopinto that
would have allowed the state’s judiciary to enforce surrogacy contracts. The
bill would have allowed a married couple to hire a surrogate mother aged 24-35 to
carry embryos from them and to pay only for expenses for the task and lost
wages by the surrogate. It was a much narrower bill than one Jindal
vetoed last year tailored to overcome many past objections to it.
But it continued to draw
opposition from some, including Louisiana’s Catholic bishops, because the entire
concept of surrogate births is contrary to Catholic moral teaching. It denies
the unifying grace of marriage and invites the indiscriminate disposal of human
life, the unused embryos. And if Jindal has demonstrated nothing else during
his political career it’s that on legislation concerning bioethical questions
he takes his Catholicism seriously in informing his actions concerning these.
And in light of court decisions,
beginning only days after his veto of the previous version, since then another
reason came to the forefront. Now that there is a jurisprudential move on to declare
marriage of a single man and a single woman as somehow discriminatory, possibly
if enacted the law
would have been challenged by same-sex couples or single individuals
claiming the limitation to married couples met this standard, much like the
parasitic alien in the Alien movie
series, now trying to burst out of its half-baked juridical shell providing a
basis on which to declare the bill’s limitation unconstitutional. Once having
surrogacy enforceable in state courts for same-sex couples, this could provide
precedence to fuel attempts to bring the special
privilege of marriage to them.
The veto takes care of that, and
author Lopinto interestingly notes that there would be no override attempt
given his judgment of legislative sentiment. Unlike last year, when the bill in
question came to the governor the day before the session ended, meaning he
could sit on it until the session’s adjournment given a 10-day window to deal
with bills (20 when out of session) and then veto it that could be undone
only through the calling of an unprecedented veto session, this year the bill
came in more than 10 days before the end of the session so Jindal had to deal
with it. However, he only let eight of those 10 days elapse and nothing
required him to send it back so quickly, after three days, as he is allowed during
a session 12 days passage before a vetoed bill must return to its chamber of
origin.
In that sense, this could mean
that Jindal signaled openness to have an override occur, by allowing the
Legislature an easier route to perform one than not calling off a veto session.
From the perspective of his religious views, casting the veto accorded to them,
but, perhaps in a recognition that he governs in a secular republic, he created
an easier path for those who discount religious belief or who perceive no
immorality in surrogacy to have their views become law.
The alternative is that his
intelligence operations informed him that override votes weren’t there, and he
decided to wrap things up sooner rather than later. That might provide a more
valid interpretation, given the other reason why the bill spelled trouble, for
if the bill could provide an avenue for forces seeking to redefine the
Constitution and what marriage means, why not pursue the most effective way of
keeping it from becoming law? Even as the veto message
makes mention only of the pro-life argument, it could have been part of Jindal’s
decision calculus.
Importantly, regardless of the
bill’s demise, surrogacy remains entirely legal in Louisiana, only that any
agreements about it cannot be enforced. And given its moral difficulties and
that any bill codifying it could be used, either by sanctioning positively surrogacy
for same-sex couples or through challenges to a bill denying it to them, as a
tool to erode the proper definition of state-recognized marriage as between a
single man and a single woman, such a bill in any form best not become law.
Therefore, Jindal acted wisely.
I don't know why the government is considering the Catholic morals even-though it is a completely against those morals it will help the parents who can have a child. Going with the god and moral values the same god made a mistake by letting the mother not to give birth to her child
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