Baltimore Sun

Overturnin­g ‘Roe’ is not a conservati­ve choice; it’s radical

- Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a columnist for The New York Times, where this originally appeared.

Dear Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Barrett, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Thomas:

As you’ll no doubt agree, Roe v. Wade was an ill-judged decision when it was handed down Jan. 22, 1973.

It stood on the legal principle of a right to privacy found, at the time, mainly in the penumbras of the Constituti­on. It arrogated to the least democratic branch of government the power to settle a question that would have been better decided by Congress or state legislatur­es. It set off a culture war that polarized the country, radicalize­d its edges and made a decision to overturn Roe — which the court seems poised to do, according to the leak of a draft of a majority opinion from Justice Samuel Alito — would do more to replicate Roe’s damage than to reverse it.

It helped turn confirmati­on hearings for the Supreme Court into the unholy death matches they are now. It diminished the standing of the court by turning it into an ever-more political branch of government.

But a half-century is a long time. The United States is a different place, with most of its population born after Roe was decided. And a decision to overturn Roe — which the court seems poised to do, according to the leak of a draft of a majority opinion from Justice Samuel Alito — would do more to replicate Roe’s damage than to reverse it.

It would be a radical, not conservati­ve, choice.

What is conservati­ve? It is, above all, the conviction that abrupt and profound changes to establishe­d laws and common expectatio­ns are utterly destructiv­e to respect for the law and the institutio­ns establishe­d to uphold it — especially when those changes are instigated from above, with neither democratic consent nor broad consensus.

This is partly a matter of stare decisis, but not just that. As conservati­ves, you are philosophi­cally bound to give considerab­le weight to judicial precedents, especially when they have been ratified and refined — as Roe was by the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision — over a long period. The fact that Casey somewhat altered the original scheme of Roe, a point Justice Alito makes much of in his draft opinion, doesn’t change the fact that the court broadly upheld the right to an abortion. “Casey is precedent on precedent,” as Justice Kavanaugh aptly put it in his confirmati­on hearing.

It’s also a matter of originalis­m. “To avoid an arbitrary discretion in the courts,” Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist No. 78, “it is indispensa­ble that they” — the judges — “should be bound down by strict rules and precedents, which serve to define and point out their duty in every particular case that comes before them.” Hamilton understood then what many of today’s originalis­ts ignore, which is that the core purpose of the courts isn’t to engage in (unavoidabl­y selective) textual exegetics to arrive at preferred conclusion­s. It’s to avoid an arbitrary discretion — to resist the temptation to seek to reshape the entire moral landscape of a vast society based on the preference­s of two or three people at a single moment.

Just what does the court suppose will happen if it votes to overturn Roe? Ending legalized abortions nationwide would not happen, so pro-lifers would have little to cheer in terms of the total number of unterminat­ed pregnancie­s, which has declined steadily, for a host of reasons, with Roe and Casey still the law of the land.

But the pro-lifers would soon rediscover the meaning of another conservati­ve truism: Beware of unintended consequenc­es. Those include the return of the old, often unsafe, illegal abortion (or abortions in Mexico), the entrenchme­nt of pro-choice majorities in blue states and the likely consolidat­ion of pro-choice majorities in many purple states, driven by voters newly anxious over their reproducti­ve rights. Americans are almost evenly divided on their personal views of abortion, according to years of Gallup polling, but only 19% think abortion should be illegal under all circumstan­ces.

It shouldn’t be hard to imagine how Americans will react to the court conspicuou­sly providing aid and comfort to the 19%. You may reason, justices, that by joining Alito’s opinion, you will merely be changing the terms on which abortion issues get decided in the United States. In reality, you will be lighting another cultural fire — one that took decades to get under control — in a country already ablaze over racial issues, school curricula, criminal justice, election laws, sundry conspiracy theories and so on.

And what will the effect be on the court itself ? Here, again, you may be tempted to think that overturnin­g Roe is an act of judicial modesty that puts abortion disputes in the hands of legislatur­es. Maybe — after 30 years of division and mayhem.

Yet the decision will also discredit the court as a steward of whatever is left of American steadiness and sanity, and as a bulwark against our fast-depleting respect for institutio­ns and tradition. The fact that the draft of Alito’s decision was leaked — which Roberts rightly described as an “egregious breach” of trust — is a foretaste of the kind of guerrilla warfare the court should expect going forward. And not just on abortion: A court that betrays the trust of Americans on an issue that affects so many, so personally, will lose their trust on every other issue as well.

The word “conservati­ve” encompasse­s many ideas and habits, none more important than prudence. Justices: Be prudent.

 ?? NYT PHOTO ?? An April 2021 portrait of the U.S. Supreme Court. Associate justices Samuel Alito, from left, Brett Kavanaugh, Clarence Thomas, Elena Kagan, Chief Justice John Roberts, associate justices Neil Gorsuch, Stephen Breyer, Amy Coney Barrett and Sonia Sotomayor.
NYT PHOTO An April 2021 portrait of the U.S. Supreme Court. Associate justices Samuel Alito, from left, Brett Kavanaugh, Clarence Thomas, Elena Kagan, Chief Justice John Roberts, associate justices Neil Gorsuch, Stephen Breyer, Amy Coney Barrett and Sonia Sotomayor.
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