The Morning Call

Leaving abortion law to states is recipe for disaster

- By Ronald J. Granieri Ronald J. Granieri is a history professor at the U.S. Army War College and a fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. His personal opinion does not necessaril­y reflect that of the U.S. Army or the Department of Defense.

Why not leave abortion to the states? One of the most common arguments made by those who want to downplay the significan­ce of Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.’s leaked draft opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health is that it would not make abortion illegal.

Rather, it would merely return the abortion debate to the legislativ­e sphere, where it belongs.

Individual states would pass their own abortion laws, as restrictiv­e or nonrestric­tive as their electorate wants them to be. There is a certain soothing quality to that argument. But issues of individual rights bearing such heavy moral weight cannot be contained within state boundaries.

“Let’s leave it up to the states” will quickly become “we expect other states to comply with our laws and will demand federal action to guarantee it” — and one only needs to look at the Fugitive Slave Act to highlight the very real constituti­onal challenge before us.

Slavery remains a moral stain on the history of the republic. It demonstrat­ed the weaknesses of American federalism when faced with fundamenta­l issues of human rights.

Even as individual states chose different paths on slavery, the question of how to manage relations between slave and free states, and what to do about people who traveled across state lines, became a persistent problem.

The Fugitive Slave Act, a revision of a 1793 statute enacted as part of the Compromise of 1850, aimed to offer a legal solution. It allowed California to enter the Union as a free state, but required all states, even those that did not allow slavery within their boundaries, to cooperate with the forcible return of escaped enslaved people.

Moral and legal complexiti­es multiplied. There was the internal warfare of “bleeding Kansas” where pro- and anti-slavery militias fought for control of the territory, and the barbarity of the Dred Scott decision, which denied enslaved people human rights even if they lived in free states.

Allowing slavery anywhere required protecting it everywhere. Subsequent compromise­s that favored popular sovereignt­y, allowing local majorities to

endorse or reject slavery, never satisfied pro-slavery factions if they lost out, and anti-slavery states proved reluctant to help slave catchers. Federalism did more to exacerbate regional divisions on slavery than solve them.

This is the context for Abraham Lincoln’s proclamati­on that the nation could not continue “half slave and half free.” Indeed, when South Carolina announced its decision to secede in December 1860, its grievances included the charge that the federal government had not done enough to ensure that all states enforced the Fugitive Slave Act.

Denouncing “an increasing hostility on the part of the non-slaveholdi­ng States to the Institutio­n of Slavery,” which “led to a disregard of their obligation­s,” South Carolinian­s claimed the northern states had essentiall­y canceled the Constituti­on.

By this logic, there could be no guarantee of any state’s rights

unless other states respected and supported them. Enforcemen­t of state laws could not end at the state line.

State legislatio­n of abortion could easily create similar paradoxes, especially considerin­g the mobility of people, ideas and goods in our globally linked world. Citizens in a state that bans abortion could travel to other states for the procedure, if they have the means.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has made it clear that California will welcome out-of-state patients and Connecticu­t has already passed a new law protecting medical providers who treat patients from other states. Some large employers, such as Tesla, have recently signaled their willingnes­s to support employees who need to travel to another state for medical care.

The paradox of states eventually demanding federal recognitio­n and support for their particular laws applies to more than just abortion. In the 20th century, locale-by-locale alcohol prohibitio­n led to a constituti­onal amendment (and then to its repeal); marijuana laws and gun rights raise similar problems today.

States struggle to manage different local laws on issues with which people deeply disagree, as do citizens, especially if they regularly travel from one jurisdicti­on to another.

Federalism, which allows individual states to become laboratori­es of democracy by experiment­ing with different approaches to public problems, is one of the great strengths of our constituti­onal order. But the republic has to guarantee some baseline rights shared by all citizens, which imposes limitation­s on how widely states can diverge.

There are few options for resolving conflicts among state laws. The Constituti­on can be amended, which takes time and requires a great deal of consensus. Or Congress can pass national legislatio­n. If neither happens the issue lands at the Supreme Court.

That was the reality that led to Roe in the first place, and it has not changed. Tossing the issue back to the states, as the Alito draft proposes, will not bring the country any closer to a resolution on abortion rights — it will just open up 50 new fronts in the fight.

The formal decision on Dobbs will not be the last federal word on abortion. This isn’t the end of the controvers­y; we’re barely at the start.

 ?? NOAH BERGER/AP ?? Abortion-rights protesters march May 14 in San Francisco.
NOAH BERGER/AP Abortion-rights protesters march May 14 in San Francisco.

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