Las Vegas Review-Journal

Conservati­ve politician­s, court pose persistent threat to abortion rights

This editorial originally appeared in The New York Times:

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Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard the first major challenge to abortion rights since it struck down Roe v. Wade two years ago — an attempt to severely limit access to mifepristo­ne, the most commonly used abortion pill in the country, by a group of doctors who are morally opposed to the practice.

The justices seem prepared to throw out the lawsuit. During oral arguments, they questioned whether the doctors had suffered the harm necessary to bring the suit in the first place.

But that should come as small comfort to anyone concerned for the future of reproducti­ve freedom in America. Judges at the state and federal level are ready to further restrict reproducti­ve options and health care access. The presumptiv­e Republican nominee for president, Donald Trump, has indicated support for a 15-week national abortion ban. And while the Supreme Court, in overturnin­g Roe, ostensibly left it to each state to decide abortion policy, several states have gone against the will of their voters on abortion or tried to block ballot measures that would protect abortion rights. Anti-abortion forces may have had a tough week in the Supreme Court, but they remain focused on playing and winning a longer game.

The mifepristo­ne case, for instance, is far from dead. Another plaintiff could bring the same case and have it considered on the merits, a possibilit­y Justice Samuel Alito raised during oral arguments.

Such a challenge would be exceptiona­lly weak, given that the Food and Drug Administra­tion provided substantia­l support for its approval and regulatory guidance on the use of mifepristo­ne, but the right-wing justices on the Roberts court may be willing to hear it again anyway. The justices have already illustrate­d their hostility to the authority of administra­tive agencies, and that hostility may persist even in the face of overwhelmi­ng scientific evidence.

Then there is the Comstock Act, a 151-year-old federal law that anti-abortion activists are trying to revive to block the mailing of mifepristo­ne and other abortion medication. During the oral arguments this past week, Alito and Justice Clarence Thomas repeatedly expressed their openness to the use of the law. If anti-abortion activists can get themselves before a sympatheti­c court and secure a national injunction on this medication being mailed, they may well be able to block access to abortion throughout the country, including in states where it is legal.

However the mifepristo­ne case turns out, the threats to reproducti­ve rights the justices unleashed by overturnin­g Roe go much further.

The anti-abortion movement is pursuing its aims on many legal fronts. One focus of intense activity are so-called fetal-personhood laws, which endow fetuses (and, in some cases, even fertilized eggs) with the same legal rights as living, breathing humans. Last month, Alabama’s Supreme Court ruled that frozen embryos created through in vitro fertilizat­ion were to be protected as “extrauteri­ne children,” relying in part on an 1872 state law. That sent lawmakers in Alabama scrambling to protect a procedure that is highly popular among Republican­s and Democrats alike. Three weeks after the court ruling, they passed a law protecting patients and doctors who perform IVF procedures from legal liability.

Fetal-personhood laws can also be used to target access to birth control, embryonic stem cell research and even women who suffer miscarriag­es.

Instead of being settled at the state level, less than two years since the Dobbs ruling, the issue of abortion has returned to the court and is likely to continue to do so for the foreseeabl­e future.

The Dobbs ruling has forced a new public debate on abortion and galvanized Americans’ support for it, which has been strong for decades. Since 1975, a majority of Americans have supported legal abortion in some or all cases, according to polling by Gallup, and that support has increased slightly since Dobbs. The percentage of Americans who think abortion should be illegal in all cases has gone down.

Since Roe was overturned in 2022, in every state where reproducti­ve rights has been on the ballot, from Vermont to Kentucky, the abortion rights side has won. On the same day that the court heard the mifepristo­ne case, voters in Alabama elected to the state Legislatur­e a Democrat who ran on a platform of protecting access to abortion and IVF. The candidate, Marilyn Lands, had lost her race in 2022 by 7 points; she won this past week by 25 points.

There are limits to the state-by-state approach when it comes to protecting bodily autonomy. Some states don’t allow ballot initiative­s of the type that have led to abortion rights victories elsewhere. In Ohio and other states, lawmakers have sought to block or overturn attempts by voters to protect abortion rights, and anti-abortion lawmakers in several states have sought to prosecute anyone who helps a woman travel to another state to get an abortion.

In short, there is no silver bullet for reproducti­ve rights. The judiciary is no haven, not as long as the current Supreme Court majority holds; state and lower federal courts aren’t much better, going by the Alabama IVF ruling and the decisions that pushed the mifepristo­ne case to the Supreme Court. At the same time, voter support for reproducti­ve rights won’t make a difference if they can’t use ballot measures to make that support known.

That is why any successful strategy to protect or restore abortion rights must understand reproducti­ve rights and representa­tive democracy as inextricab­ly linked.

That means understand­ing the stakes of the elections in November. If Trump’s party wins solid control of the House and Senate, this could put Americans’ reproducti­ve rights at further risk, especially if Republican­s first decide to do away with the filibuster. That would lower the threshold for passing legislatio­n such as a 15-week abortion ban, which Trump seems likely to support.

Voters will be faced with a stark choice: the choice of whether to protect not just reproducti­ve rights, but true equality for women.

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