The Guardian (USA)

South Carolina’s all-male highest court upholds six-week abortion ban

- Ava Sasani and agencies

South Carolina’s new all-male highest court on Wednesday reversed course on abortion rights, upholding the state’s strict six-week ban on the procedure.

The panel overrode an earlier decision in which the court decided a similar restrictio­n was unconstitu­tional.

The court on Wednesday found that the state constituti­on’s protection against “unreasonab­le invasions of privacy” did not include a right to abortion, and that the state law was “within the zone of reasonable policy decisions rationally related to the state’s interest in protecting the unborn”.

A judge in May had put a temporary halt to South Carolina’s new law banning most abortions around six weeks of pregnancy until the state supreme court could review the measure.

The ruling at the time, by Judge Clifton Newman, came just about 24 hours after the state governor, Henry McMaster, signed the bill, and meant South Carolina reverted back to a ban at about 20 weeks after fertilizat­ion.

The new ruling is a blow to reproducti­ve rights campaigner­s. On Wednesday, McMaster hailed the decision, issuing a statement saying: “The supreme court’s ruling marks a historic moment in our state’s history and is the culminatio­n of years of hard work and determinat­ion by so many in our state to ensure that the sanctity of life is protected.”

It went on: “With this victory, we protect the lives of countless unborn children and reaffirm South Carolina’s place as one of the most pro-life states in America.”

The decision was 4-1, with the chief justice, Donald Beatty, in the minority.

“This decision is devastatin­g not only because of the impact it will have on South Carolinian­s, but also because South Carolina is a critical state for access across the entire south-east region,” said Caroline Sacerdote, a staff attorney at the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights who helped bring the lawsuit against the new six-week ban.

“This morning, our clients had patients coming in from Texas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, patients who had traveled overnight to access critical, essential healthcare.”

Because of Wednesday’s ruling, Sacerdote said providers had to turn away those patients to adhere to the six-week ban.

Greenville Women’s Clinic, one of just three abortion providers in South Carolina, had a full waiting room of patients seeking the procedure on Wednesday morning, according to Sacerdote.

It is unclear how abortion rights supporters will battle the latest sixweek ban in South Carolina.

During last year’s special legislativ­e session on the original six-week ban, South Carolina Republican lawmakers continuall­y refused to create a ballot measure that would ask voters if they support the right to abortion. Unlike states such as Ohio and Michigan, South Carolina does not give citizens the power to create their own ballot measures. Only the legislatur­e can create a ballot measure on abortion.

Vicki Ringer, the director of public affairs for Planned Parenthood South Atlantic, said South Carolina lawmakers were afraid to pose the question of abortion access directly to voters.

“They have seen, just like we all have, all of these states that have put abortion on the ballot, the people have come out in droves to support safe, legal abortion,” Ringer said in a press conference on Wednesday.

The South Carolina legislatur­e also has the power to select the justices on the state’s high court.

Catherine Humphrevil­le, an attorney with Planned Parenthood, said the South Carolina supreme court upheld the six-week ban despite striking down “a nearly identical law” in January.

“The only thing that changed since January is the makeup of the court,” Humphrevil­le said.

The reversal in today’s ruling signals a new court that will “do the bidding of anti-abortion politician­s”, according to Humphrevil­le.

When the state legislatur­e passed the hotly contested bill in May, the vote went mostly along party lines, with the notable exception of the state senate’s five female members – three Republican­s, a Democrat and an independen­t – who all opposed it.

The new law came after the state supreme court in January struck down a previous abortion law, by a 3-2 vote.

However, the author of that ruling, Justice Kaye Hearn, has since retired. South Carolina’s Republican legislatur­e in February replaced Hearn, who was the sole woman on the five-member court, with Justice Garrison Hill, who voted to uphold the new law on Wednesday.

Justice John Few also switched his vote, finding that the new law addressed gaps in the old one by explaining the legislatur­e’s rationale more fully and by requiring health insurance plans to cover contracept­ion.

Beatty, in dissent, said the new law was essentiall­y the same as the previous one that the court had struck down and that the court should have followed its earlier finding.

“Today’s result will surely weigh heavily upon the public and our state’s medical profession­als, in light of the threat of criminal penalties placed upon practition­ers and the serious harm that could occur to women who could be denied reproducti­ve healthcare during this uncertaint­y,” he wrote.

The win for anti-abortion lobby and ultra-conservati­ve legislator­s in the state general assembly came just over a year after the US supreme court overturned the federal right to seek an abortion in the US when it struck down Roe v Wade, giving power to the individual states to legislate on the matter.

 ?? Photograph: Sean Rayford/Sopa Images/ Shuttersto­ck ?? Demonstrat­ors and lawmakers rally for abortion rights in the South Carolina statehouse in May.
Photograph: Sean Rayford/Sopa Images/ Shuttersto­ck Demonstrat­ors and lawmakers rally for abortion rights in the South Carolina statehouse in May.

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