Bush rushes to sign law putting food tube back in coma woma
>From Tim Reid in Washington
 
 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,11069-1535112,00.html
 
  
Terri Schiavo: legal confusion 
  
PRESIDENT BUSH interrupted his Easter holiday last night to sign an 
unprecedented emergency Bill aimed at saving the life of a brain-
damaged Florida woman at the centre of a right-to-die case that has 
divided America. 
After an extraordinary intervention by the US Congress, the House of 
Representatives, which is controlled by Republicans, was poised to 
pass legislation this morning that would send back to a federal 
court the case of Terri Schiavo, whose feeding tube was removed on a 
judge's order on Friday. 

The congressional Bill, prolonging the legal, medical and personal 
drama of a case that has pitted the woman's husband against her 
parents, and pro-life conservatives against right-to-die advocates, 
focused solely on Mrs Schiavo, who this morning begins her third 
full day without nourishment and fluids. Doctors say that it could 
take two weeks before she dies. 

 
 
The Bill, which Mr Bush says that he will sign as soon as it reaches 
his desk in the Oval Office, would remove control of the case from 
Florida's courts, which repeatedly have ruled that her tube should 
be removed, and force a review by a federal court. Its backers say 
that her tube would have to be reconnected while a review is under 
way. 

Republicans hope to overcome the objections of some Democrats that 
the move is an unconstitutional intervention undermining judicial 
independence. Yesterday, in the House of Representatives, Democrats 
refused to allow the measure to go ahead with an informal voice 
vote, forcing Republicans to bring more members back to Washington 
for a roll-call vote that requires at least 218 of the House's 435 
members to be present. They hoped to reconvene early today. 

"The President intends to sign legislation as quickly as possible 
once it is passed," Scott McClellan, Mr Bush's spokesman, said as 
the President prepared to leave his ranch in Texas. "This is about 
defending life." 

The Bill, which received Senate support after House Republicans 
compromised and agreed to let it apply only to the Schiavo case, 
came after a judge in Florida ignored another unprecedented 
congressional manoeuvre on Friday to save her life. 

Conservative politicians then subpoenaed Mrs Schiavo, who has been 
in a persistent vegetative state for 15 years, to appear as a 
witness on Capitol Hill on March 25, in a bid to give her witness 
protection. 

Judge George Greer, who was under police protection last night after 
receiving death threats, ruled that Congress had no business trying 
to defy Florida's courts. He ordered the tube to be removed. 

Mr Schiavo, his wife's legal guardian, said that he was "outraged" 
by Congress's latest move. He accused congressional Republicans of 
political opportunism. 

Mrs Schiavo, 41, has been at the centre of a battle between her 
husband and her parents since 1990, when a heart attack starved her 
brain of oxygen, leaving her in what court-appointed doctors say is 
a persistent vegetative state. 

She left no will and her husband, who has two children with a new 
partner of ten years, has successfully argued in a string of courts 
that she would not have wanted to be kept alive by means of a 
feeding tube to the stomach. Her parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, 
dispute this, saying that their daughter responds to them and her 
condition could improve.On Friday night the US Supreme Court, for 
the second time in a week, refused to hear the case. 

Mrs Schiavo's tube has twice been removed before, only to be 
reinserted, most recently in 2003. That year, Jeb Bush, the Florida 
Governor and the President's younger brother, pushed an emergency 
law through the Florida legislature authorising him to order the 
reinsertion of the tube, six days after doctors removed it under 
court order. That law was later ruled unconstitutional.
 
 
  






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