Dayton Daily News

Abortion battles likely to end with Aristoteli­an mean

- Armstrong Williams Armstrong Williams is the largest minority owner of broadcast television stations in the U.S.

The authentica­ted leak of Justice Samuel Alito's draft 5-4 opinion overruling the United States Supreme Court 1973 abortion rights precedent of Roe v. Wade is likely to stick. The draft fully reflected the judicial philosophi­es of the five-member majority and the oral argument last December in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organizati­on.

But overruling Roe is not the nail in the coffin for abortion rights.

Far from it. The overruling would entrust abortion policy to the 50 state legislatur­es, with a marginal role for the federal government through the power of the purse or the regulation of interstate commerce, e.g., the Hyde Amendment, which forbids federal monies to underwrite elective abortions.

Moreover, state policies will continue to be constraine­d by constituti­onal limitation­s. Under the Privileges and Immunities Clause of Article IV and the right to interstate travel, anti-abortion states are prohibited from preventing their citizens from obtaining an abortion in a pro-abortion state. Additional­ly, conservati­ve Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist in Webster v. Reproducti­ve Health Services declared state statutes decreeing that life begins

at conception, endowed with rights of personhood protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, would be constituti­onally suspect.

State legislatur­es are likely to exhibit wide variations in abortion policies. Liberal states like California, New York and Connecticu­t will probably endorse subsidized abortions on demand. Remember, then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan in 1967 signed a liberal state abortion law that anticipate­d the Supreme Court's holding in Roe.

Approximat­ely one-third

of the states had liberalize­d their abortion laws in the three years antedating Roe. Further, abortion-rights advocates are well-funded. They can fend for themselves in the political arena: Planned Parenthood, NARL ProChoice America, the National Abortion Rights Federation, the National Organizati­on of Women and the American Civil Liberties Union. Anti-abortion organizati­ons are equally well-endowed and politicall­y organized: National Right to Life Committee, Pro-Life Action

League, Susan B. Anthony List and the Republican National Coalition for Life. Strict anti-abortion laws are likely to proliferat­e in conservati­ve states like Missouri, Ohio, Texas and Georgia.

It is not anomalous that under the Constituti­on issues of considerab­le moral moment are addressed differentl­y from state to state — for example, laws against liquor or gambling. And if abortion is thought to be sufficient­ly morally momentous to require a national policy, then amending the Constituti­on is the path forward, as with the Civil War Amendments that emancipate­d Black people and endowed them with full rights of citizenshi­p. During the 45 years that have elapsed since Roe, Congress has refrained from proposing anti-abortion or abortion-rights constituti­onal amendment, and two-thirds of the states have never summoned a constituti­onal convention under Article V to do so. But the political dynamics favoring a constituti­onal amendment may change after Roe is overruled . ...

The issue will remain with the states after Roe is overruled, and medical technology will be in the catbird seat. Anti-abortion groups must remain politicall­y active or confront defeat through congressio­nal inaction.

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