Lodi News-Sentinel

Supreme Court lets controvers­ial anti-abortion law remain in effect

- Todd Ruger

WASHINGTON — A sharply divided Supreme Court officially declined late Wednesday to halt a Texas law that effectivel­y bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, meaning the law will remain in force while a coalition led by abortion providers pursues a legal challenge to strike it down.

In a 5-4 decision handed down just before midnight, the five members of the court’s conservati­ve wing ruled that the providers had raised “serious concerns” about the constituti­onality of the Texas law. But they said the “complex and novel” procedural questions raised by the unusual design of the law — in which private citizens would enforce it instead of state officials — meant the Supreme Court could not stop it from going into effect Wednesday.

The ruling drew sharp rebukes in dissents from the three justices on the court’s liberal wing, and one from Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who pointed out how Texas lawmakers had designed the law just to evade such a preliminar­y judicial review.

The four dissenters would have stopped the unpreceden­ted law from taking effect, as Roberts put it, “so that the courts may consider whether a state can avoid responsibi­lity for its laws in such a manner.”

Instead, almost exactly 24 hours earlier, with the law taking effect and no word yet from the Supreme Court, most abortions became illegal in Texas under a law that conflicts with long-standing rulings that prohibit bans on abortion before viability, or the time when a fetus could survive outside the womb.

“The Court has rewarded the State’s effort to delay federal review of a plainly unconstitu­tional statute, enacted in disregard of the Court’s precedents, through procedural entangleme­nts of the State’s own creation,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in her dissent.

The Texas law bans abortions if a fetal

heartbeat can be detected, which occurs around the sixth week of pregnancy. Many patients may not know they are pregnant until after a heartbeat can be found. About 85 percent to 90 percent of Texas abortions occur after six weeks of pregnancy.

The Texas legislatur­e did not set up a typical system where state officials would enforce the law, such as making abortion a crime. Instead, the law allows private citizens to sue abortion providers, physicians, patient support networks and anyone who supports someone getting an abortion, even by driving them to a clinic.

Any individual can bring suit in any Texas court if they suspect someone “aided” in an abortion. The plaintiff would receive a $10,000 “bounty” in the event of a guilty verdict. That structure, along with legal action at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, meant the coalition of abortion providers had to take the unusual step of asking the Supreme Court to stop the law before any court had done so.

The Supreme Court leaned heavily on that procedural wonkiness to decide to let the law go into effect despite the concerns about whether it is constituti­onal. Federal courts can’t stop the implementa­tion of laws themselves, the majority wrote, only the individual­s tasked with enforcing those laws. “And it is unclear whether the named defendants in this lawsuit can or will seek to enforce the Texas law against the applicants in a manner that might permit our interventi­on,” the court’s decision states.

The state represente­d that it and its employees do not have the authority to enforce the Texas law, the Supreme Court said. It is not clear whether the court can issue an injunction to prevent state judges from deciding lawsuits under the law. And no private citizen has tried to enforce the law in a case before the court.

“In reaching this conclusion, we stress that we do not purport to resolve definitive­ly any jurisdicti­onal or substantiv­e claim in the applicant’s lawsuit,” the Supreme Court wrote. “In particular, this order is not based on any conclusion about the constituti­onality of Texas’s law, and in no way limits other procedural­ly proper challenges to the Texas law, including in Texas state courts.” ‘This is untenable’ The dissents pointed out that letting the law take effect has consequenc­es.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer wrote that allowing the law to take effect could threaten “imminent and serious harm” to women who have a constituti­onal right to abortion in the first part of a pregnancy. That right was first establishe­d in the 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade and sharpened in the 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. Breyer wrote that the state’s providers have stopped abortion procedures after the detection of a heartbeat, with clinics claiming they will be unable to run the financial and other risks that come from waiting for a private person to sue them under the Texas law.

Sotomayor wrote separately that “the majority of Justices have opted to bury their heads in the sand” on a law that is “a breathtaki­ng act of defiance — of the Constituti­on, of this Court’s precedents, and of the rights of women seeking abortions throughout Texas.”

“Today, the Court finally tells the Nation that it declined to act because, in short, the State’s gambit worked,” Sotomayor wrote. “This is untenable. It cannot be the case that a State can evade federal judicial scrutiny by outsourcin­g the enforcemen­t of unconstitu­tional laws to its citizenry.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States