The Guardian (USA)

Sotomayor decries abortion ruling but court’s conservati­ves show their muscle

- Ed Pilkington in New York

Sonia Sotomayor, the liberal-leaning justice on the US supreme court, put it plainly. For almost three months, lawmakers in the Republican-controlled legislatur­e of Texas had “substantia­lly suspended a constituti­onal guarantee: a pregnant woman’s right to control her own body”.

“The court should have put an end to this madness months ago,” Sotomayor said.

But when the supreme court issued on Friday its majority opinion on SB8, the extreme Texas law that bans abortions effectivel­y at six weeks, in blatant violation of the court’s own constituti­onal rulings, it still didn’t put an end to the madness.

It allowed the law, the most restrictiv­e currently in force in the US, to remain in effect.

And by varying margins, the new conservati­ve supermajor­ity of the court, consolidat­ed by Donald Trump’s appointmen­t of three new rightwing justices, restricted the legal route by which abortion providers could challenge the law.

From now on the legal battle would have to be focused narrowly on just four state employees responsibl­e for medical licensing in the state. Other Texas officials involved, notably the state’s attorney general Ken Paxton and clerks in state courts, would be let off the hook.

Even more provocativ­ely, while the court sent the abortion fight back to a federal district court in Austin, it let the ban itself stand. That adds insult to injury given the supreme court’s muchcritic­ised refusal to stay the ban at the start, not to mention the many weeks it has taken to hand down its decision.

Over those weeks, Texas women have paid a heavy price. “The court’s delay in allowing this case to proceed has had catastroph­ic consequenc­es for women seeking to exercise their constituti­onal right to an abortion in Texas,” Sotomayor said in a powerful dissenting opinion.

In September alone, the first month of the ban, the number of legal abortions performed in Texas plummeted to about half the level a year ago. That was the largest recorded decline in the state’s recent history, with untold numbers of women forced to seek abortions out of state or carry unwanted pregnancie­s to term.

Sotomayor, who is emerging as a pivotal voice of resistance within the post-Trump court, was forthright in her choice of words. Her disagreeme­nt with the conservati­ve justices went far beyond a “quibble” over which state officials abortion providers can sue, she said.

The question was: is the supreme court prepared to stand up in the name of constituti­onal rights to the cynical antics of ideologica­lly driven Republican­s in states such as Texas?

“The choice to shrink from Texas’s challenge to federal supremacy will have far-reaching repercussi­ons,” Sotomayor warned. “I doubt the court, let alone the country, is prepared for them.”

Nobody can doubt that SB 8 is a flagrant violation of the constituti­onal right to an abortion enshrined in the 1973 landmark ruling Roe v Wade. While Roe sets the bar of fetal viability at about 24 weeks, Texas now puts it at the point of earliest cardiac activity, around six weeks – before many women even know they are pregnant.

Neil Gorsuch, one of the three Trump appointees, who wrote Friday’s majority opinion, said that the issue of the constituti­onal right to an abortion was not under considerat­ion in this case. The matter at hand in the Texas law was whether abortion providers could press on with their challenge to the ban by suing specific state officials.

That will do little to assuage the jitters of 80% of Americans who think that abortions should be legal in all or certain circumstan­ces. In a separate case before the supreme court based on a new Mississipp­i ban at 15 weeks, which is now blocked by a lower court, Roe v Wade is very much up for grabs, and the signs are ominous.

In oral arguments in the Mississipp­i case less than two weeks ago, several of the conservati­ve justices indicated they were willing to sharply restrict or even overturn the right to an abortion despite its rock-steady standing as a pillar of constituti­onal law for almost 50 years.

Nor does Gorsuch’s protestati­on that Friday’s case was merely focused on procedural matters offer much comfort. SB 8 was devised by Texas Republican­s as a juridical trick to skirt around constituti­onal protection­s by making it more difficult for abortion providers to challenge the law in federal court.

At the heart of the legislatio­n is a ruse designed to make a mockery of federal oversight. Enforcemen­t of the abortion ban is transferre­d from state officials who are vulnerable to federal challenge to private individual­s, armed with financial inducement­s of up to $10,000 to cover legal fees.

“SB 8 is structured to thwart review and result in ‘a denial of any hearing’,” Sotomayor decried. “The events of the last three months have shown that the law has succeeded in its endeavor.”

That is why the vote of the court’s new post-Trump majority to issue such a narrow opinion over SB 8 is more than a “quibble”. The highest court in the nation has been defied by a group of extremist Republican­s openly flouting the court’s own rulings.

In response, the conservati­ve majority emboldened by Trump has opted not to insist on respect for the constituti­onal law of the land, but instead to blithely play along.

As Sotomayor put it: “By so doing, the court leaves all manner of constituti­onal rights more vulnerable than ever before, to the great detriment of our constituti­on and our republic.”

Perhaps most tellingly, the idea of appeasing Texas Republican­s in their attempt to undermine the supreme court’s own precedents proved too much even for John Roberts, the chief justice.

In important aspects of Friday’s decision, he broke with his five fellow conservati­ve justices and sided pointedly with Sotomayor and the liberal minority.

“The clear purpose and actual effect of SB 8 has been to nullify this court’s rulings,” Roberts said, in words which may reverberat­e down the years.

“The role of the supreme court in our constituti­onal system is at stake.”

 ?? ?? The supreme court’s ruling allowed the law, the most restrictiv­e currently in force in the US, to remain in effect. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters
The supreme court’s ruling allowed the law, the most restrictiv­e currently in force in the US, to remain in effect. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

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