Dark Days: Supreme Court Overturns Roe

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Image by William Murphy from Pixabay

Friday’s Supreme Court ruling overturning the Court’s landmark Roe v Wade ruling which had been in effect since the 1970s, while not unexpected, was the culmination of decades of efforts to overturn it. Below, five Post Alley writers react:

Dan Chasan

1) Anyone surprised by the Supreme Court’s Friday decision to toss out Roe and Casey hasn’t been paying attention. After the leaked draft opinion – and for that matter, after three new justices were hired to do just that – what did you expect?  Probably no other decision in Supreme Court history has been so clearly telegraphed in advance. And probably no other court has had three members chosen just to rule a certain way on a certain subject.  (FDR certainly picked judges who would rule in favor of his New Deal legislation — Jackson had been his Attorney General, Black a New Deal supporter in the Senate, Douglas his chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission who was subsequently discussed as a vice-presidential running mate in 1944 — but that was a whole political program, rather than a specific case.)

2) As I’ve written before, just scrapping Roe and Casey isn’t the endgame. The endgame is granting Constitutional rights to fetuses, so that states like Washington can no longer make abortion legal. And it may not take another decision. Just as Democrats have been making a show about Congressional legislation that would make abortion legal nationwide, a Republican Congress with a large enough Senate majority could pass a law that made it illegal. (Either way,of course, someone would sue, and  the issue would wind up back in SCOTUS’ lap.)

3) Despite Alito’s assurance that this case was just about abortion – does anyone really believe him — it doesn’t look like the endgame for rolling back rights that the Court has created since the 1960s, either. Now that the SCOTUS majority has taken a holiday from stare decisis, why stop here?

Jean Godden

Nightmares sometimes come true. In overturning Roe v. Wade on Friday, the U. S. Supreme Court abandoned its tattered reputation for trust and stepped into the open as a blatantly political institution. 

Justice Samuel Alito’s majority (6-3) ruling destroys the long-believed principle that women and men should have equal control over their bodies. The decision does nothing to end partisan rancor, something Alito argued, and in fact only widens and cements that division.

As a result of the ruling, half of the U.S. states will soon ban abortion. Some will actively criminalize the procedure, prosecuting those who seek an abortion and those who assist them. Others will encourage vigilante enforcement of abortion bans and will attempt to extend their laws into states where reproductive rights are still honored.

The decision itself will not end abortion. Just as in the pre-Roe past, those determined to exercise reproductive rights will find a way. Some, newly pregnant, may be able to obtain pills and self-abort. Those who can afford to do so will travel to states where abortion remains legal. On Friday governors of California, Oregon and California issued an eight-point document vowing to maintain the west coast as an abortion firewall. 

How long that firewall will stand firm, however, may depend on whether the U.S. Congress remains at least partially in Democratic control. If Republicans make major gains in the midterms, many among them are threatening to pass a law-making abortion a crime nationwide. True believers foresee going further, granting standing to fetuses. 

They may not stop there. There are those like Justice Clarence Thomas who see the Supreme Court abandonment of Roe as the first step to revisiting other right-to-privacy cases. That view now threatens landmark decisions like the 1965 Griswold decision legalizing access to birth control, Lawrence v. Texas that overturned sodomy laws in 1998 and the 2015 Obergefell ruling that granted same-sex marriage.

In reacting to the Roe ruling as well as to the decision to allow open gun carry, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi identified Democrats as the party of freedom and safety and Republicans as the party of punishment and control.  She said, “In November, the rights of women — indeed of all Americans — will be on the ballot.”  

Tom Corddry

I first learned that SCOTUS had overturned Roe officially via an early-morning fund-raising email from a group raising cash to back Senate and Congressional candidates committed protecting and restoring abortion rights. More are arriving every hour. Abortion will now be an immense and expensive political battleground at the national level, and particularly in the dozen or so states which do not yet fall into either of the two “settled” camps: the 21 states where abortion rights are clearly protected and likely to remain so, or the 18 states where abortion is entirely or almost entirely prohibited or likely to become so.

While this battle is fought, possibly for years to come, there will be an urgent need to ameliorate the damage inflicted on women in the prohibition states. As we’ve learned from the politics of the climate crisis, there is typically tension between those who want the strongest possible systemic response to a crisis and those willing to “treat the symptoms.” The former fear that if the latter are too successful, it lessens the urgency they can muster for systemic change.

Post-Roe, an all-or-nothing bet on federal legislation to protect abortion rights is a bad strategy and would leave millions of women with no support when they urgently need it.

America has about 75 million women of reproductive age (15-49). Roughly 23 million live in the 18 prohibition states and another 21 million live in the states where the future of legal abortion is contested. Together, this is nearly 60% of all women of childbearing age. If they have abortions at the same rate as the overall population, they will now be prevented from having 350-400,000 abortions/year. What can be done for them without delay?

  1. We need the equivalent of an “Operation Warp Speed” to reduce the demand for abortions:
    1. Make birth control vastly more accessible: do away with the foolish prescription requirement for birth control pills and subsidize delivery-on-demand from online pharmacies. Those ubiquitous Amazon packages with the penis logo on the side would be perfect.
    2. Make morning-after pills vastly more accessible: similarly subsidize and promote direct delivery.
    3. Communicate much more prominently about birth control with outreach to every corner of the country.
  2. We need to provide the means for early medical (as opposed to surgical) abortions with a similar “warp speed” increase in urgency:
    1. Make pregnancy tests vastly more accessible: they are already fairly cheap at $5-$10/test, but there are still access impediments for women of modest means in remote locations: they should get the same kind of subsided, promoted direct delivery as birth control pills: pretend they’re COVID tests.
    2. Make medical abortions very readily available for home use within the first 10-12 weeks of pregnancy (current US regulation sets limit at 10 weeks, elsewhere its typically 12). The vast majority of US abortions occur in the first trimester. Some states have passed laws against abortion-by-mail, so there will be legal battles to be fought as well, and perhaps guerilla innovations.
    3. This too will require prominent and pervasive communication. Telemedicine might make a big difference.
  3. We need to better address the need for safe later abortions:
    1. Subsidized transportation to states where abortion is protected as well as subsidized procedures and after-care.
    2. Communicate to counter the lurid misinformation about later abortions promulgated by anti-abortion groups.

The Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade requires a large and determined legal and political response which is likely to continue for years. It should also beget a large and determined campaign to ameliorate the distress imposed on women, starting today.

Joel Connelly

When Washington voted in 1970 to legalize (with limits) abortion, three years before Roe v. Wade, we were not endorsing radical change but exercising a reasonable use of intelligence.  Human rights were at the root of a decision backed by Democrats and Republicans in the Legislature, and many in the faith community.

Women, and mostly poor women, were being killed and maimed by illegal back-alley abortions.  An anti-abortion sermon at Seattle’s Assumption parish was interrupted by a question from the pews: “Who is to look after the life of the mother?”  Pregnancy put a spotlight on inequality. With appropriate contacts, better off women could visit a clinic near University Village.  A travel agency scheduled abortion trips to Japan, complete with a day of sightseeing in Tokyo.

The U.S. Supreme Court, in its ruling, takes away a right from all Americans and sends decisions on abortion back to the states.  Inequality becomes, again, the law of the land.  Abortion will be outlawed in about half our states.  In some places, women will be forced to bear a rapist’s child.  In all places, the greatest stress will be put on poor and young women who find themselves expecting unexpectedly.

Didn’t we once fight a civil war over this?  In a great Democratic Convention speech, Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey said it was time to get out from the shadow of states’ rights and into the sunshine of human rights.  The Supremes are sending us back into the dark shadows. What further restrictions to the right of privacy, to make your own life choices, lie in store?

I’m reading cheers at this victory for “life” from politicians (e.g. Washington Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers) who have voted to cut Food Stamps and opposed expanded Medicaid coverage to poor families.  Leaders of the religious right gloat at the pact they made, turning a blind eye towards the excesses of Donald Trump as a tradeoff for judicial appointments.

What’s needed?  Washington’s decision of 1970 should today be a model for the nation’s response.  The Supremes have put human rights in danger, the human health of women in peril.  Issues of social equality and fairness, which faced our state then, now confront the nation.

We cannot sit back as a self-satisfied commonwealth, secure that Women in Washington State have the right of choice, while radical judges and legislatures impose their will elsewhere.  Silence gives consent.  We have much outreach ahead of us.

Mike James

As many have observed, this is the first time our Supreme Court has established a fundamental Constitutional right and then taken it away, unleashing with certainty a bitter national fight in the Congress and in states for years to come as pro-life politicians work to establish a nationwide ban on a woman’s right to choose. And that is what the Trump majority decided today – that a woman has no reproductive autonomy, that once she is pregnant a state government may control her womb.

I remember vividly my own repertorial experience of long ago now – the underground of abortion in the years before Roe, before our own state law protecting a woman’s choice. Some I interviewed had horrific and unsafe procedures while others were guided by a volunteer network to safer settings and outcomes. That world looms again in half the country.

At Seattle’s Town Hall this week, in anticipation of today’s decision, the local president of Planned Parenthood talked of a 385% increase, “an absolute flood of patients,” coming to our state to terminate pregnancies they do not want, coming from nearby states that will now forbid choice. Another participant called it “surreal that after fifty years we are even discussing this question.” State Attorney-General Bob Ferguson warned that the reasoning in today’s rejection of Roe could endanger other rights – to access birth control, same-sex marriage, transgender care.

All agreed that today’s decision is not an end, but the beginning of a nationwide fight to protect reproductive autonomy where it still exists, to extend it if possible, perhaps to become single-issue voters, a tactic that’s clearly worked for the anti-choice movement.

The question now and going forward is the same as ever — Does a woman control her body, or the state? A question as unsettled as ever.

17 COMMENTS

  1. The three judges who lied to get their jobs as justices of the supreme court should be impeached. They lied to get one of the best jobs in the whole world and they are liars and they lied to the American people. They should be removed from the court. With dishonest people on the court how can we ever trust any of the judgments they make because they are so self-serving.

  2. IF the extremes on both sides of this issue accept a compromise liken to the State of Washington, then it is resolvable. 4 months should be enough time to determine if you want to abort. Some of us believe that developing embryo is alive prior to birth.
    Noticed one of our elected officials proudly stated she had had 3 abortions – is this poor planning or career planning ?

  3. I was never so sad as I was today. I remember the two women of color whose bed I stood beside and pronounced them dead. Septic abortions. One woman had 8 children and the other had 4 children. Who on this court considers anyone but their Own power of the court to enforce their religious on some else. Their god has given them the power to tell others how to honor their faith. Separation of Church snd state is gone if you haven’t accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal Savior as I did at my mother’s knee you better get to work quickly.

  4. June 24, 2022 and the overthrow of Roe may be the Fort Sumter moment of the new American Civil War. Roe may be dead but the fight has just begun. As Alito and Thomas now are emboldened to go after contraception, same sex marriage, and LGBTQ rights, their next act will be go after the 19th Amendment. After all, the original Constitution said nothing about the rights of women to vote. I hope Washington will become a sanctuary state, and protect the women who seek safety and sound medical care, who cannot find it where they live. Maybe we can become the last stop on a new Underground Railroad?

    • The current Constitution does have the 19th Amendment …….The Amendment option is a non-starter unless there is a term limit, that was not in the proposed law submitted by Schumer this year.

  5. “A woman’s body belongs to herself alone. It is her body. It does not belong to the church. It does not belong to the United States of America or to any other Government on the face of the earth. … Enforced motherhood is the most complete denial of a woman’s right to life and liberty.” –Margaret Sanger

          • You said you agree with this statement: “Enforced motherhood is the most complete denial of a woman’s right to life and liberty.”

            But you also agree with enforced motherhood. So you’re OK with that “most complete denial.”

            Which means you and I have nothing more to talk about. I will not debate with men who regard woman as second-class citizens.

  6. The government – Federal or State – has no business or rights to control individual decisions regarding their body.

  7. “Those ubiquitous Amazon packages with the penis logo on the side would be perfect.”
    Thank you, Tom Corddry. Reading this sentence, I laughed for the first time in 2 days.
    Creative thinking like your suggestions will help save women’s lives.

    Thank you, Dan Chasen, Jean Godden, Joel Connelly, and Mike James for speaking out in support of full citizenship for women in this dark fiat from our ‘taliban’ tribunal.

    • Sure, Democrats who go far beyond the public consensus are asking to become a minority party, but let’s not help the Republicans paint the party that way.

      The article you link, for example (“Daily Mail”, really?) somewhat incoherently writes “Hillary’s comments came just days after President Biden signed an executive order to make ‘gender-affirming care’ that can involve hormone therapy and surgery while accusing Republican lawmakers of ‘bullying’ LGBTQ+ children.”

      The pen seems to have slipped when they were trying to tell us just what Biden’s executive order did. Here’s what the White House says: “The President’s Order charges HHS to work with states to promote expanded access to gender-affirming care. It also charges HHS to help prevent LGBTQI+ suicide by expanding youth access to suicide prevention resources, and to issue new guidance through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration on providing evidence-informed mental health care for LGBTQI+ youth.”

      “Work with states” etc. Somewhat less dramatic than the right wing tabloid version. As best as I can make out, the Biden administration is not at all under the control of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and it’s very unhelpful to promote that right wing talking point / lie.

      That said, it often seems that our local Democratic party district organizations would benefit a lot from more participation by people with somewhat more conventional, representative views.

  8. A solution might be for Biden to soon announce he is not going to run in 2024 in that he has achieved his political goals and wants to enjoy his family etc..This would allow Independents to come back to the Dems in lieu of Trump or wanna be heading their ticket and maybe stave off a huge loss in the house and keep the senate and regain the house with an actual moderate Presidential victory. THEN a Constitutional Amendment WITH TERMS to make it palatable to a majority.

  9. A terrible side effect of this mess is that all this energy now has to go into dealing with the fallout, distracting us from constructively addressing other serious problems nipping at our collective heels.
    It feels like the court is throwing wrenches into the works.

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