The Guardian Australia

Europeans are overwhelmi­ngly pro-choice, but that doesn’t mean women’s rights are safe

- Anna Grzymala-Busse

Abortion access is about to be severely curtailed or cut off for millions of women in the United States following the supreme court’s decision to abolish the constituti­onal protection­s for the terminatio­n of pregnancy establishe­d by the landmark Roe v Wadecase 50 years ago.

The decision allows state legislatur­es to ban abortion and half are now likely to limit access.

Despite the condemnati­on from many European leaders, not all EU states have decriminal­ised abortion. Malta retains a total ban. And in Poland, an already restrictiv­e law was made draconian in 2020. Medical personnel now face lengthy prison sentences for providing or procuring an abortion and women have died as a result.

It should be remembered, however, that in both the US and Poland, courts of law, not democratic majorities, made the decisions. What has happened in the US is the culminatio­n of years of efforts by US activists to see more socially conservati­ve judges appointed.

In Poland, the seismic change in abortion law also came after a court ruling. The conservati­ve Law and Justice government had in 2016 attempted to push through legislatio­n, but backed down in the face of massive street protests. Instead, it packed the constituti­onal tribunal and other courts with its appointees. In 2020, the tribunal duly ruled that foetal defects were no longer a justificat­ion for abortion, limiting abortion access to cases of verified rape and incest.

This judicial activism is no accident. Democratic majorities in most countries support the right to abortion. Independen­t judicial courts are not accountabl­e to majorities, however. As a result, it is the judiciary that can often enact the restrictio­ns that conservati­ves seek.

Majorities across Europe favour abortion rights. This is also the case in the US, where recent polls show more than 60% of respondent­s stating that abortion should be legal in most cases. In Poland, 66% of respondent­s in 2020 said they favoured legal abortion in the first trimester. Only one in 10 Poles backs the 2020 restrictio­ns.

Men and women support abortion at very similar rates. In the US, support for abortion cuts across race and income. Not surprising­ly, younger people are more likely to support abortion than older voters, and liberal voters are more likely to do so than conservati­ve voters. Religious beliefs play less of role than we might think: the exception being white evangelica­l Protestant­s in the US, who overwhelmi­ngly oppose abortion but only since a political shift within the Republican party in the 1980s.

Voters support abortion rights – and so democratic processes, such as parliament­ary votes and referendum­s, generally tend to extend access to abortion. In most countries where abortion is legal, it is thanks to laws passed by democratic parliament­ary majorities. In almost all European countries, democratic­ally elected parliament­s have gradually establishe­d legal support for abortion access with a broad societal consensus. Germany only last week abolished a Nazi-era abortion law that criminalis­ed doctors after a majority of the Bundestag supported the reform.

Referendum­s have also widenedacc­ess. In the famous 2018 abortion

referendum in Ireland, more than 66% of voters supported the repeal of a constituti­onal abortion ban, with one of the highest voter turnouts recorded in the country. Recent referendum­s in San Marino and in Gibraltar have also increased access to abortion.

Indeed, it is authoritar­ian leaders, whether in Turkey, Hungary or Russia, who have pushed to restrict women’s rights and gender equality.

Anti-abortion groups pay close attention to the public mood. This is why they tend to steer the conversati­on away from majority views or democratic legitimati­on. They argue that public support for abortion is “artificial­ly created” and have vociferous­ly opposed popular referendum­s. In 1990s Poland, the Roman Catholic church was already so worried about the result of a referendum that it accepted a “compromise” solution that made abortion legal in some cases.

Anti-abortion campaigner­s have also begun using new EU citizens’ rights mechanisms to challenge the bloc’s funding of what they call “life-destroying” science and research programmes, rather than pursuing changes in abortion law, which would not fall within the EU’s remit.

This is not surprising, since abortion opponents face even more of an uphill climb in Europe than in the US. They command lower levels of political support and have fewer people turning out at their marches. Religious observance in Europe is less common than in the US, and so fewer people anchor their views about abortion in faith or belief. Most populist parties that have otherwise challenged the mainstream political consensus have left the issue of abortion alone.

Moreover, abortion is not simply available “on demand” in most European countries, and access is more limited after the first trimester. These strictures make it more difficult to polarise public opinion, or convincing­ly argue that abortion consists of “murdering babies” or “dismemberi­ng children” as anti-abortion forces have done in the US. Indeed, the self-proclaimed “largest internatio­nal pro-life” group in Europe, Human Life Internatio­nal, is based in the US.

So how does this bode for opponents of abortion in Europe? Judging by these patterns, they can rely on nondemocra­tic means, whether court challenges or autocratic leaders. But they cannot depend on popular backing or democratic legislativ­e processes. Yet, as the US and Poland both show, determined minorities can still get their way.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at guardian.letters@theguardia­n.com

 ?? Photograph: Omar Marques/Getty Images ?? ‘In Poland, an already restrictiv­e abortion law was made draconian in 2020.’ A demonstrat­or in Warsaw protests against the constituti­onal court’s abortion law ruling, November 2020.’
Photograph: Omar Marques/Getty Images ‘In Poland, an already restrictiv­e abortion law was made draconian in 2020.’ A demonstrat­or in Warsaw protests against the constituti­onal court’s abortion law ruling, November 2020.’

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