High court rejects appeal over Planned Parenthood funding
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court signaled Monday it is not anxious to revisit the abortion controversy in the year ahead, disappointing conservative activists who were cheered by the appointment of Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
After weeks of debate behind closed doors, a divided court turned down appeals backed by 13 conservative states that sought to defund Planned Parenthood.
The court’s action leaves in place federal court rulings in much of the country that prevent states from denying Medicaid funds to women who go to a Planned Parenthood clinic for health care, including medical screenings or birth control. It is already illegal to use federal money like Medicaid to pay for abortions, but some states wanted to go further, cutting off all Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood because the organization offers the procedure using alternative revenue sources.
In dissent, Justices Clarence Thomas, joined by Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch, accused their colleagues of allowing a “politically fraught issue” to justify “abdicating our judicial duty.”
The lower courts are divided on the Medicaid funding dispute, making the high court’s refusal to clarify the issue all the more surprising to some.
“We created the confusion. We should clear it up,” Thomas wrote in Gee vs. Planned Parenthood. “So what explains the court’s refusal to do its job here? I suspect it has something to do with the fact that some respondents in these cases are named ‘Planned Parenthood.’ ”
The court’s brief order denying the appeals from Louisiana and Kansas suggest Chief Justice John Roberts and Kavanaugh were not willing to hear the cases.
Last year, the 8th Circuit Court in St. Louis, splitting with other appeals courts, upheld Arkansas’ decision to cut off funding to Medicaid to Planned Parenthood clinics. Lawyers for Louisiana and Kansas hoped that split would prompt the high court to take up the dispute.
It takes four justices to hear a case, and these appeals were considered in a series of closeddoor meetings since late September. But the court’s conservatives were unable to gain the needed fourth vote. Kavanaugh took his seat in the second week of October, and his supporters assumed he would vote in favor of restricting abortion rights when given the opportunity.
Catherine Foster, president of Americans United for Life, said her group was “disappointed” with the court’s action. “We join the dissent in calling on the court to do its duty,” she said.
In the past decade, conservative states have sought to defund Planned Parenthood because it is the nation’s largest single provider of abortions. None of the Medicaid money pays for abortions, and most of these state funding bans have been blocked by federal judges. Republican lawmakers who sponsored the “defund” laws argue the states should not indirectly subsidize facilities that perform abortions. David G. Savage is a Los Angeles Times writer.