FILE PHOTO: A Planned Parenthood building is seen in Birmingham, Alabama, March 14, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
BOSTON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on Tuesday allowed President Donald Trump's administration to enforce in some Democratic-led states a provision of his signature tax and domestic policy bill that deprives Planned Parenthood health centers that perform abortions of Medicaid funding.
A three-judge panel of the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals at the administration's request put on hold an injunction issued by a lower-court judge who barred the law from being enforced in 22 states and the District of Columbia.
It marked the latest instance of the appeals court lifting an order by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani preventing the law from being implemented, after the 1st Circuit on December 12 overturned a ruling she issued in another case brought by Planned Parenthood declaring that the law violated the U.S. Constitution.
Representatives for Planned Parenthood and the states that pursued the case did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
A provision in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, passed by the Republican-led Congress, bars Medicaid funding for tax-exempt organizations that provide family planning and reproductive health services if they perform abortions and received more than $800,000 in Medicaid funds during the 2023 fiscal year.
Planned Parenthood says the law was passed with it in mind and has contributed to at least 20 of its health centers closing since Trump signed the measure into law in July.
After the 1st Circuit earlier this year paused Talwani's initial injunction in Planned Parenthood's favor, a group of Democratic attorneys general in states including California, Massachusetts and New York asked her to block the law's enforcement again, but on different grounds.
Talwani, who was appointed by Democratic President Barack Obama, agreed to do so on December 2, saying the states were likely to succeed in establishing that the law constitutes an unconstitutional retroactive condition on their participation in the Medicaid healthcare program for low-income people.
Talwani held the law did not give the states clear notice as to which entities it covered and imposed a restriction they could not have anticipated after the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approved their state Medicaid plans.
But Tuesday's 1st Circuit panel, comprised only of judges appointed by Democratic presidents, said the Trump administration had demonstrated it was likely to prevail on appeal in establishing the law was not ambiguous and that Congress had the power to make such changes.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Lincoln Feast.)
