Springfield News-Sun

Texas abortion law reminds us that elections matter

- Clarence Page Middletown native Clarence Page writes for the Chicago Tribune.

It didn’t take much longer than a nanosecond after the Supreme Court allowed a radical Texas anti-abortion law to take effect before the social media hashtag #Texantalib­an went viral.

What? Comparison­s to the brutal, misogynist­ic Taliban? That’s more than a little extreme in itself, right? But then, so is the new Texas anti-abortion law.

The abortion measure, which Texas Gov. Greg Abbot signed into law in May, went into effect last Wednesday. Among other limits, it prohibits Texas abortions as early as six weeks, which is before most women even know they are pregnant.

Worse, it passes the law enforcemen­t vigilante-style from the state to private citizens by providing bounties, in effect, to those who want to sue anyone who plays even a small part in aiding a woman’s ability to terminate her pregnancy.

As critics point out, this could lead to lawsuits against friends, family members, medical profession­als, abortion funds, rape crisis counselors and even the taxi or ride-sharing driver who takes a woman to abortion services.

While defenders of the law play down how much it might be used to bombard abortion providers with lawsuits, a whistleblo­wer website invites anonymous tipsters. Not surprising­ly, it was immediatel­y inundated by spammers.

But as a matter of judicial integrity and public confidence in the decisions of the nation’s highest court, more sweeping questions have been raised not only about the justices’ decision, but also how they allowed the Texas law to go into effect — without public deliberati­on or transparen­cy.

That shortcomin­g was enough to ignite a Friday announceme­nt from U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat: The Senate Judiciary Committee he chairs will hold a hearing about the new law, he said, and, more broadly, the decisions made by the Supreme Court on an emergency basis, as this one was.

Durbin decried the conservati­ve justices’ “abuse of the shadow docket,” which refers to emergency decisions that don’t follow normal procedure. Under the shadow docket, a term coined by University of Chicago law professor William Baude, it takes only an appeal to one justice who then decides whether to forward the matter to the rest of the court.

We’ve been hearing more talk about this decades-old procedure in recent times, Durbin noted, as it has been used to overturn the Biden administra­tion’s COVID-19 eviction moratorium and reject the administra­tion’s decision to repeal the Trump administra­tion’s “Remain in Mexico” immigratio­n program, as it is informally known.

Now a 5-4 majority of the high court has used it to allow the Texas abortion law to take effect instead of the more customary move in such controvers­ial cases of blocking its enforcemen­t while appeals go forward.

Yes, if you’re keeping score, even Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court’s three liberal members in opposition, writing in his dissenting opinion that he would have blocked this law because of its serious consequenc­es. But his vote was not enough to tilt the balance away from his fellow conservati­ves who dominate the court 6-3, thanks to the three justices appointed by then-president Donald Trump . ...

The good news in recent decades has been a decline in abortions as birth control has become more available. The goal, as Bill Clinton said in his campaign for the presidency, is to make abortion “safe, legal and rare.” It was an inspired slogan to bridge a broad range of political views. Unfortunat­ely, it didn’t last long enough.

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