Poteau Daily News

U.S. Supreme Court preserved rule of law

- Johnathan Small

Many pro-life Oklahomans are celebratin­g the United States Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe vs. Wade and leave abortion regulation to the states.

However, all Oklahomans should celebrate the fact that the court did not allow pressure tactics to impact their ruling. If the justices had done otherwise, it would push our nation down a path where no one can feel secure in their constituti­onal rights.

There’s no denying the justices faced unpreceden­ted attacks from outside groups that included the threat of violence and assassinat­ion.

Since a draft of the court’s abortion ruling was released earlier this year, the justices have been targeted by protestors and one man was arrested for a planned assignatio­n attempt on U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

That alone represents an indefensib­le attack on the legitimacy of our court system, but things were even worse.

Despite the assassinat­ion effort, and the fact that justices’ home addresses had been publicized, U.S. House Speaker Nance Pelosi stalled passage of legislatio­n to provide security for the justices and their families (even though the Senate passed it unanimousl­y), and her delay continued even after the foiled attempt on Kavanaugh’s life.

That means members of the U.S. Supreme Court had to worry not only about their own personal safety, but the safety of their family members, amidst a pressure campaign to vote to uphold Roe regardless of what justices believed was constituti­onal.

In too many instances, members of the legislativ­e branch added rhetorical fuel to the pro-violence fire.

In 2020, the Democratic leader of the U.S. Senate, Chuck Schumer of New York, specifical­ly addressed Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, declaring, “You have released the whirlwind, and you will pay the price. You won’t know what hit you if you go forward with these awful decisions.”

Schumer later tried to walk back his words, but they were widely understood as a tacit endorsemen­t of violence if the court overturned Roe.

Following the ruling, U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, DCalif., appeared to endorse insurrecti­on, declaring, “The hell with the Supreme Court. We will defy them.” Amidst such rhetoric, it’s not shocking a group called “Jane’s Revenge” is now credited with firebombin­g pregnancy centers and similar acts of domestic terrorism, or that the Arizona state capitol was the scene of a riot by pro-abortion activists.

However, the justices did not yield to threats or intimidati­on. They stayed the course. Had they done otherwise, mob rule would replace the rule of law and no one’s life or liberty would be truly protected — including those disappoint­ed by the court’s abortion ruling.

By overturnin­g Roe, U.S. Supreme Court justices took a strong stance against judicial overreach, but they also refused to allow their rulings to be influenced by outside pressure tactics. In the years ahead, that last fact may be just as consequent­ial as the former.

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