Boston Sunday Globe

Fetal personhood could challenge the meaning of equality

- By Mary Ziegler

For years, the antiaborti­on movement had Roe v. Wade in its crosshairs — so it seemed that the reversal of Roe would be the ultimate victory for Americans who oppose abortion. But when the Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade in June, antiaborti­on groups were far from done. And a law that went into effect in Georgia a few weeks ago gives us a preview of what antiaborti­on leaders hope is next nationwide: the recognitio­n of fetal personhood.

If a fetus is a person, then every constituti­onal right and legal protection theoretica­lly applies in the womb. At a minimum, that means abortion itself is unconstitu­tional. It also could upend the meaning of equality under the law.

Georgia’s new law, which bans abortion roughly two weeks after a woman could realize she is pregnant, amends the definition of “natural person” to mean “any human being, including an unborn child.” Georgia has also spelled out some of the consequenc­es of this definition of personhood: The state has establishe­d that fetuses count as persons for census purposes and qualify as dependents on tax returns. Other implicatio­ns of this principle remain uncertain. Will fetuses be able to have lawsuits brought on their behalf ? Will they be able to own or inherit property? If fetal personhood is a constituti­onal principle, will states even have the authority to allow abortions in cases of rape or incest?

Georgia’s law may be the first personhood measure to go into effect, but other states are likely to follow.

This should come as no surprise. The antiaborti­on movement has not been fighting since the 1960s merely to allow each state to set its own policy on abortion. Instead, the movement has always argued that abortion is a violation of the fetus’s rights to equality under the law. Even after Roe v. Wade legalized abortion throughout the United States in 1973, antiaborti­on leaders still spent a decade fighting for a constituti­onal fetalperso­nhood amendment. That goal of recognitio­n for fetal personhood never faded away, even if the movement had to give up on the amendment.

Now that Roe is gone, the push for a national ban on abortion has started again. The movement is preparing legislatio­n banning abortion if Republican­s regain control of Congress and the White House in 2024. Antiaborti­on lawyers have also developed a plan to persuade the conservati­ve Supreme Court to recognize fetal personhood and declare abortion unconstitu­tional.

What happens if one of these efforts succeeds? When we imagine a future in which fetal personhood is the law, we often think of its practical consequenc­es: Will pregnant women be able to drive in high-occupancy-vehicle lanes, which a Texas woman recently asserted she should be allowed to do? Would someone who drank wine during pregnancy be guilty of child abuse or assault?

These practical consequenc­es matter, but the potential ascendancy of the personhood movement could also profoundly change the way the law defines constituti­onal equality.

From the beginning, the antiaborti­on movement argued that the word “person” in the Constituti­on applied before as well as after birth — and that fetuses resembled other groups that qualify under the Constituti­on for protection against discrimina­tion, such as women and people of color.

When confronted with claims about whether any given community should be treated as a protected class, courts have looked at whether that community has experience­d a long history of subordinat­ion, whether that community is politicall­y powerless, and whether people in that community possess an immutable trait. Antiaborti­on leaders would have to upend this framework to get fetuses treated as a protected class. After all, there is nothing immutable about gestationa­l age. Antiaborti­on leaders also acknowledg­e that discrimina­tion against fetuses is not the historical norm: In their telling, there has been almost universal condemnati­on of abortion in the past. In effect, the antiaborti­on movement argues that what matters is not past discrimina­tion or even the effects of contempora­ry discrimina­tion. What matters, in the movement’s view, is the fact that a fetus is vulnerable and depends physically on someone else to survive.

If this alternativ­e vision of equality becomes part of our law, would this solicitude for life end at birth, or would people with illnesses or disabiliti­es be accorded more protection than the law currently provides? What about young children and the elderly?

And if this is what equality means, what does it augur for women or people of color? If the past doesn’t matter for this calculatio­n — if the legacy of past discrimina­tion doesn’t count — then there is less reason to worry about or even notice sexual harassment or racial injustice in the present.

The establishm­ent of fetal personhood would also force conservati­ve lawmakers to decide how to enforce fetal rights — and who would be punished for violating those rights. At least for the moment, most states do not allow for the criminal punishment of women for abortion (Georgia’s law is unclear on this point). Nonetheles­s, women have faced criminal consequenc­es for their behavior during pregnancy.

For example, even when Roe was on the books, some women were forced to have C-sections to maximize the chances that their child would be born alive or faced criminal prosecutio­n for drug and alcohol use during pregnancy by prosecutor­s who invoked the idea of fetal personhood.

Is there a future in which a personhood movement pays equal attention to measures that would dignify fetal life by helping people who are pregnant? To date, most personhood strategies focus on telling women what they cannot do rather than supporting them. Would personhood ever require financial support for fetuses from other people, such as biological fathers, or from the government?

There are more questions than answers when it comes to the future of personhood. But one thing is clear: If the personhood movement has anything to say about it, the meaning of equality in America will never be the same.

Mary Ziegler, a professor of law at the University of California, Davis, is the author of “Dollars for Life: The AntiAborti­on Movement and the Fall of the Republican Establishm­ent.”

 ?? JAMES SWIFT/AP ?? A woman with a child protested in favor of banning all abortions at a rally in Georgia.
JAMES SWIFT/AP A woman with a child protested in favor of banning all abortions at a rally in Georgia.

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