The Maui News

Defending women’s rights

- ■ Guest editorial excerpt by The Guardian, U.K.

The decision, when it came on Friday, was not a surprise. Even before the dramatic leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion last month, it was widely predicted that the U.S. Supreme Court would grab the opportunit­y presented by the Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on case to rescind the decision made in 1973 in Roe v Wade. This, after all, was the purpose of President Trump’s three Supreme Court selections — and the culminatio­n of a decadeslon­g campaign by anti-abortionis­ts to return to states the authority to ban the procedure. But the announceme­nt still came as a shock. The U.S.’s global influence means that the decision to remove a woman’s constituti­onal right to abortion there reverberat­es far beyond its shores.

The speed with which multiple U.S. states reacted is disturbing; already, abortion has been outlawed in 10, with 11 more expected to follow shortly. While all women should be entitled to control their own lives and bodies, there are instances when denying this is particular­ly cruel. Americans who oppose forced pregnancy and birth now face the horror of rape and incest victims, including children, being compelled to become mothers. The U.S. is exceptiona­l in its lack of federal maternity provisions; children as well as parents will suffer the consequenc­es of unwanted additions to their families, with poor and black people the worst affected.

Early signs are that the most extreme Republican legislatur­es could try to block girls and women from travelling out of state for treatment, and impose further restrictio­ns on care delivered remotely including medication sent by mail. The potential for personal data stored online, including on menstrual apps, to be used against women is causing justified alarm. Having relied on Roe v. Wade to protect access to abortion for half a century, politician­s can no longer do so. Abortion is now set to become a key issue in this autumn’s midterms.

How this pans out will depend on public opinion; polling data suggest that 85 percent of Americans support legal abortion in some circumstan­ces, and Democrats hope that this could work to their advantage. But the anti-abortion right is a formidable force. With hindsight, President Obama’s decision not to codify Roe v. Wade into federal law, and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s choice not to retire when he could have nominated a replacemen­t, look like disastrous errors.

The three liberal justices who dissented said they did so with sorrow for “many millions of American women” and also for the court itself. With this decision, it has chosen to reopen deep wounds. The 14th amendment on which Roe v. Wade rested granted rights to former slaves, and is the basis for other crucial decisions including on same-sex marriage. By dismissing Roe v Wade in the way that they did, and against the wishes of Chief Justice John Roberts (who argued to retain it, while allowing Mississipp­i’s 15-week rule to stand), the court’s hard-right wing has seized control.

Unpreceden­ted division, and greatly increased hardship and risk for those denied safe healthcare, will be the outcome. It is too soon to say whether Trump’s justices and their backers have overreache­d from an electoral perspectiv­e. If there is an early lesson to be drawn, it is that once gained, women’s rights must be constantly defended.

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