WASHINGTON — In a historic reversal, the Supreme Court on Friday overturned the landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision and ruled states may again outlaw abortion.
The court’s conservative majority said the Constitution does not protect the rights of women to choose abortion, and instead leaves these decisions in the hands of state lawmakers.
The ruling marks the most significant curtailing of an established constitutional right in the court’s history.
The opinion written by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. closely tracks a draft which was leaked by Politico on May 2.
The court’s three liberal justices dissented in the Mississippi case.
The ruling figures to set off a fierce political fight nationwide and state-by-state as politicians and voters weigh in on whether abortion should be restricted or prohibited entirely.
Opinion polls show most Americans support access to abortion, at least in the early months of a pregnancy. Nevertheless half the states are expected to seek to quickly enforce laws that make most abortions illegal.
The decision is the high court’s most far-reaching reversal on a matter of constitutional rights since 1954, when the justices reversed six decades of precedent and struck down laws authorizing racial segregation.
But that unanimous decision in Brown vs. Board of Education expanded the rights of individuals and rejected conservative state laws, while today’s does the opposite. It empowers states and reverses what had been the most significant women’s rights ruling in the court’s history.
For the U.S. Catholic bishops as well as evangelical Christians who believe abortion ends a human life and is immoral, the ruling is a triumph decades in the making. They had refused to accept the idea the Constitution protected abortion as a fundamental right.
The decision also reflects a profound change within the court and the Republican Party.
When court handed down the Roe vs. Wade ruling in 1973 and voided the abortion bans that were in effect in nearly all the states, the 7-2 majority included five Republican appointees. In 1992, when a divided court upheld the right to abortion, the five justices in the majority were Republican appointees.
But in recent decades, Republican presidents promised to select new justices who would overturn Roe vs. Wade.
With the help of Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, President Donald Trump appointed three new justices who made the difference. The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in September of 2020 cleared the way for McConnell and his Republican majority to confirm Justice Amy Coney Barrett a week before Trump was defeated in the November election. Her vote proved crucial to the outcome.
It is rare for the court to make such an abrupt turn so quickly and on such a great constitutional question. The prospect for a major change on abortion first became apparent in the summer of 2018.
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, a likely swing vote on abortion, announced his retirement at age 82, clearing the way for Trump to appoint Kennedy’s former clerk, Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh. After a fierce fight in the Senate, Kavanaugh was confirmed on a party-line vote.
Republican state attorneys saw an opening to change the law. In June 2020, Mississippi’s Attorney General Lynn Fitch urged the court to review a proposed state law that limited abortions to 15 weeks of a pregnancy.
The justices were set to consider the appeal in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organization at their first conference of the new term on September 29, 2020. But on Sept. 18, Ginsburg, the court’s senior liberal, died after a long battle with cancer.
Four days later, the Mississippi appeal was “rescheduled” for a future conference and on May 17, 2021, they announced they would hear the case and decide “whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions were unconstitutional.”
When the high court heard arguments in December, only Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. focused on the 15-week limit, the question the court had agreed to decide.
The five on his right—Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett—were ready to go further and repeal the right to abortion.
As impactful as it was, the Roe ruling was always built on a shaky legal foundation that left it vulnerable to reversal. Even the liberal lion Ginsburg, before she joined the court, had complained the sweeping decision attempted to move the nation too far, too fast, and should have had a clearer grounding in the Constitution.
Conservative justices exploited those weaknesses in overturning it.
(5) comments
Abortion was not an "established Constitutional right" until created out of whole cloth in 1973. As noted by Justice Alito, "Roe was egregiously wrong from the start. Its reasoning was exceptionally weak, and the decision has had damaging consequences. And far from bringing about a national settlement of the abortion issue, Roe and Casey have enflamed debate and deepened division.
It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people’s elected representatives."
Exactly right. And now it goes to the states. 76 of people polled think it should be illegal after 15 weeks.
You do know that GA passed a trigger law in 2019 that prohibits most abortions after the detection of a fetal “heartbeat,” typically around the sixth week of a pregnancy, before most women even know they are pregnant, right ? 90%+ of abortions occur well before 15 weeks and late term abortions are usually only performed due to medical emergencies on behalf of the mother.
Which adds nothing to the constitutional question addressed in Dobbs. If you think GA laws should change, you are free to lobby the legislature to change them or run for office and propose legislation addressing your view. The Dobbs decision does not make legal or illegal any specific abortion procedure or statute. It simply recognizes what even Ruth Bader Ginsberg recognized publicly - Roe & Casey were based on extremely poor constitutional reasoning. Since "Roe was egregiously wrong from the start" it ought not to be allowed to stand as the basis for an alleged constitutional right. As noted by a pro abortion legal scholar in 1973, Roe was "not constitutional law" at all and gave "almost no sense of an obligation to try to be."
As noted in the majority opinion, "For the first 185 years after the adoption of the Constitution, each State was permitted to address this issue in accordance with the views of its citizens." All Dobbs does is return to that standard - whether and how to regulate abortion is now a State law question.
Are you a woman? Most women DO KNOW they are pregnant within six weeks. Lots and lots of signs of it.
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