Los Angeles Times

Justices weigh abortion law

- By David G. Savage

Supreme Court conservati­ves sound as though they might move cautiously in the Louisiana case.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court heard its first abortion case with President Trump’s two new conservati­ve appointees on Wednesday, but the conservati­ve justices sounded as though they might move cautiously rather than issue a broad ruling on the issue.

The justices focused their questions on how specifical­ly a Louisiana law requiring doctors who perform abortions to have hospital admitting privileges would affect women and clinics that perform the procedure.

Four years ago, the court by a 5-3 vote struck down a nearly identical law in Texas.

“This case is about this court’s respect for precedent,” Julie Rikelman, a lawyer for the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights, told the justices. If the state’s law took effect, “it would leave Louisiana with just one clinic and one doctor providing abortions,” she said. And it “would do nothing for women’s health.”

But Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, who likely hold the deciding votes, suggested that precedent alone would not determine the outcome.

Roberts said the facts of each case may differ, and therefore “the results would be different in different states.”

Even though the high court had struck down the similar Texas law as unconstitu­tional, the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans upheld the Louisiana law on the grounds that the admitting-privileges rule would have less effect in Louisiana.

Kavanaugh agreed with Roberts, saying the issue was not simply whether admitting privileges by themselves are improper, but whether they impose an undue burden.

If, for example, all doctors in a state obtained admitting privileges, would a requiremen­t on abortion providers still be unconstitu­tional, he asked. “Could you say that the law still imposes an undue burden, even if there is no effect?”

Rikelman conceded that would be a harder case to win. She stressed, however, the admitting-privileges rule “has no medical benefits whatsoever.”

It extends to doctors who do no surgery but simply dispense pills that induce an abortion, she said. And its impact in Louisiana “would be severe. It would leave only one physician to serve 10,000 people per year in the entire state.”

Roberts also pressed Elizabeth Murrill, Louisiana’s solicitor general, on the rule’s supposed benefits. In 2016, the court decided that the admitting-privileges rule in Texas provided no or minimal benefit to women. Roberts suggested that health benefits of admitting privileges would be the same for Louisiana.

“The impact might be different in different places,” Roberts said, “but as far as the benefits of the law, that’s going to be the same in each state, isn’t it?”

Murrill disagreed and tried to argue the benefits of the law, but she ran into skeptical questions from the court’s liberals, led by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

They pointed to the difficulti­es abortions providers have encountere­d in obtaining privileges in many cases. They noted, for example, that some doctors had obtained privileges at a hospital in New Orleans or a medical center in Baton Rouge, but could not do the same in the Shreveport area, where the Hope Medical Group is the only provider of abortions.

In his comments, Roberts suggested the court must weigh the benefits and burdens of the Louisiana law and decide then whether it would put an undue burden on abortion rights.

This could lead to a relatively narrow ruling in the case of June Medical Services vs. Russo.

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