The Oklahoman

SCOTUS upholds funding rulings

Top court won’t take up two cases about Planned Parenthood

- BY ROBERT BARNES

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court declined Monday to review lowercourt decisions that blocked state efforts to cut off public funding for Planned Parenthood, a move that suggests a majority of the court may be steering clear of controvers­ial issues — at least for now.

New Justice Brett Kavanaugh did not join the court’s three most conservati­ve members in calling to accept the cases. Justice Clarence Thomas rebuked his colleagues for what he said was a dodge, attributin­g it to their aversion to taking up the issue of abortion that lurked in the case.

“Some tenuous connection to a politicall­y fraught issue does not justify abdicating our judicial duty,” Thomas wrote. “If anything, neutrally applying the law is all the more important when political issues are in the background.”

Thomas’s dissent from the court’s decision to pass on the case revealed a split among the court’s five conservati­ves: Justices Samuel Alito Jr. and Neil Gorsuch signed on to the statement. Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. did not.

It takes the votes of four justices to accept a case.

The action is another example in which Kavanaugh has laid low after his divisive confirmati­on hearings, after which he was narrowly approved in October on a largely partisan vote.

The contentiou­s fight put the court

in an uncomforta­ble political spotlight. Since then, the majority of justices have not exhibited a rush to tackle emergency requests from the Trump administra­tion or take up controvers­ial issues that have arisen from the lower courts.

The caveat is that justices know that there will be plenty of future opportunit­ies — including in the very issue on which the court demurred Monday.

The cases, which the court has been pondering since September, have to do with whether individual Medicaid recipients who receive services from providers such as Planned Parenthood have a right to challenge a state’s decision to cut off funding to the providers.

Five regional courts of appeal have said they do, while one has said they do not. That is the kind of split that normally prompts the Supreme Court to act.

“What explains the court’s refusal to do its job here? I suspect it has something to do with the fact that some respondent­s in these cases are named ‘Planned Parenthood,’ “Thomas wrote.

Louisiana and Kansas, the two states at issue in the cases before the court, announced plans to terminate funding for Planned Parenthood through Medicaid after an antiaborti­on group released videos in 2015 it said showed Planned Parenthood executives

discussing the sale of fetal tissue.

Planned Parenthood denied the allegation­s, saying the videos were heavily edited, misleading and discredite­d.

The organizati­on sued in federal court, joined by individual­s who said the efforts to cut funding violated a federal law that gives Medicaid patients the right to seek service from the accredited providers they choose.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, ruling in the Kansas case, said states have power in deciding which providers to fund. But “states may not terminate providers from their Medicaid program for any reason they see fit, especially when that reason is unrelated to the provider’s competence and the quality of the health care it provides,” a panel ruled.

The state asked the Supreme Court to review that ruling. “We regret today’s decision from the U.S. Supreme Court announcing that it fell one vote short of taking our case against Planned Parenthood,” Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer, a Republican, said in a statement.

Thomas mentioned the videos in his dissent.

“It is true that these particular cases arose after several states alleged that Planned Parenthood affiliates had, among other things, engaged in ‘the illegal sale of fetal organs’ and ‘fraudulent billing practices,’ and thus removed Planned Parenthood as a state Medicaid provider,” Thomas wrote.

 ?? [PHOTO BY RICKY CARIOTI/THE WASHINGTON POST] ?? The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington.
[PHOTO BY RICKY CARIOTI/THE WASHINGTON POST] The U.S. Supreme Court in Washington.

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