Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Roe reversal does make US an outlier

America an aberration on abortion access

- Madison Czopek and Tom Kertscher

President Joe Biden claimed the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade made America an aberration when it comes to abortion access.

“With this decision, the conservati­ve majority of the Supreme Court shows how extreme it is, how far removed they are from the majority of this country,” Biden said a couple hours after the ruling was released on Friday. “They have made the United States an outlier among developed nations in the world.”

While the high court’s decision leaves in place state laws that permit abortion, it removes the national right to an abortion — something that is widely guaranteed by laws or court rulings in other developed nations.

With few exceptions, legal abortion is available in “peer nations,” including in countries comparable to the U.S. in terms of developmen­t or in their use of a common law system, said Martha Davis, a law professor at Northeaste­rn University who filed an amicus brief in 2021 with the court arguing that Roe should not be overturned.

In U.S., abortion access varies

The high court ruled 6-3 to uphold a restrictiv­e Mississipp­i law and 5-4 to reverse Roe, with the majority opinion saying “the Constituti­on makes no express reference to a right to obtain an abortion.” The decision ended nearly 50 years of federally protected access to abortion and returned power to individual states to set their own laws.

That means access to abortion varies widely in the U.S.:

● Sixteen states, including California and New York, plus the District of Columbia, have passed laws allowing access to abortions.

● Eighteen states, including Michigan and Wisconsin, are about to see abortion become illegal soon, if not immediatel­y. These states either have preRoe laws restrictin­g abortion that snap back into effect if Roe is overturned, or they have “trigger” laws that were written to take effect in the absence of Roe.

In the remaining 16 states, the legality of abortion is currently unclear, for various reasons. This includes such states as Minnesota and Pennsylvan­ia.

This lack of uniformity sets the U.S. apart from other countries. Most developed countries have a national standard for access to abortion or consistenc­y across subnationa­l entities rather than wide variations in laws among states, Davis said.

In the U.S., “we’re going to have some places that are at no abortion at all,” which is “clearly an outlier” among other nations, she said.

Abortion in G7 nations

Developed nations consisting of the world’s leading economies are sometimes referred to as the G7, or the Group of Seven, which includes the U.S. and six other industrial­ized nations. Unlike the U.S., those six have national laws or court decisions that allow access to abortion, with various restrictio­ns.

Canada: Allows abortion on request and there is no federal gestationa­l restrictio­n, but subnationa­l government­s have a variety of restrictio­ns.

Great Britain: Allows abortion until 24 weeks of pregnancy with the authorizat­ion of two doctors — or later than that if continuati­on of the pregnancy past 24 weeks involves risk of grave physical and mental injury or if there are severe fetal abnormalit­ies.

France: Restricts elective abortions after 12 to 14 weeks, but has exceptions for specific economic or mental health reasons that extend the cutoffs.

Germany: Restricts elective abortions after 12 to 14 weeks.

Italy: Restricts elective abortions after 12 to 14 weeks.

Japan: Allows abortions up to 22 weeks for socioecono­mic reasons and in cases of rape, though spousal permission is required.

Other developed nations also have national laws that allow abortion access. Nations that allow elective abortion until 20 weeks of pregnancy include China, the Netherland­s and New Zealand. In 2020, Argentine lawmakers voted to legalize abortions up to 14 weeks. In February, Colombia legalized abortion during the first 24 weeks of pregnancy. In Australia, laws vary by state or territory, but the three largest states permit abortions up to 22 to 24 weeks.

Laws “vary widely from place to place,” said Davis of Northeaste­rn University, and in some countries, you might need to obtain an additional doctor’s note after certain stages of pregnancy. But in many such situations

“those sorts of regulation­s are not significant hurdles to people.”

“They’re not used as kind of weapons in the way that sometimes they are in the United States, as a way of preventing people from from getting an abortion,” she said.

The three dissenting justices argued the global trend “has been toward increased provision of legal and safe abortion care.”

A number of countries, including New Zealand, the Netherland­s and Iceland, permit abortions up to a roughly similar time as Roe did (up to 24 weeks), and most Western European countries “often have liberal exceptions” to timelimit restrictio­ns, including to prevent harm to a woman’s physical or mental health, they wrote.

Comparing abortion laws globally, a 2022 Council on Foreign Relations report said the past 50 years have seen “an unmistakab­le trend toward the liberaliza­tion of abortion laws, particular­ly in the industrial­ized world.”

By its review, 38 countries have changed their abortion laws since 2008, and all but one of those changes “expanded the legal grounds on which women can access abortion services.”

The Center for Reproducti­ve Rights said that over the past several decades, nearly 50 countries had liberalize­d their abortion laws.

Our ruling

Biden said the Supreme Court decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade “made the United States an outlier among developed nations in the world” on abortion rights.

The ruling eliminates the national right to an abortion, which puts the U.S. at odds with other developed nations, including the other six G-7 nations, most of which have laws or court rulings that provide for abortion access on a national basis, though with restrictio­ns. The U.S. ruling does leave in place state laws that permit abortion.

We rate Biden’s statement Mostly True.

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