Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Abortion rights flow from amends for slavery

- ROBIN ABCARIAN @AbcarianLA­T

Now that we’ve had a moment to digest the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion overturnin­g Roe vs. Wade, one thing is clear: Words have lost their meaning.

The court’s three newest justices, Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, all said under oath during their confirmati­on hearings they believed that the two major rulings upholding the federal right to abortion — Roe vs. Wade and Planned Parenthood vs. Casey — were settled law.

“Casey,” testified Gorsuch, “is settled law.”

Roe, testified Kavanaugh, “is settled as a precedent of the Supreme Court . ... It has been reaffirmed many times over the past 45 years.”

“Roe,” testified Barrett, “is a precedent of the Supreme Court entitled to respect under the doctrine of stare decisis.”

Were the nominees prevaricat­ing? That’s debatable, but they’ve certainly opened themselves to ridicule.

“They knew that if they were honest they wouldn’t get the job, which I think is perjury,” said late-night TV host Stephen Colbert. “But what do I know? I’m not a Supreme Court justice. I’m not a good enough liar.”

It should be obvious by now that none of this trio ever considered Roe and Casey settled law, and they certainly did not respect the doctrine of stare decisis — Latin for “to stand by things decided” — otherwise they would not have signed on to a draft opinion that tosses out a right that has improved or saved the lives of millions of women who have exercised

it over the past half-century.

Another word that seems to mean nothing to the court’s conservati­ve bloc: liberty.

“Liberty is a capacious term,” writes Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. in the draft opinion. “As Lincoln once said: ‘We all declare for Liberty; but in using the same word we do not all mean the same thing.’ ”

Well, if liberty can mean so many things, then I guess it really means nothing at all. (Unless we are talking about allowing discrimina­tion in the name of religious liberty, in which case Alito can say exactly what it means.)

Alito’s “underlying message is it’s illegitima­te to protect rights that aren’t laid out clearly in the text of the Constituti­on,” said David Gans, director of the Human

Rights, Civil Rights and Citizenshi­p Program at the Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center, an organizati­on dedicated to a progressiv­e interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on. “This is an opinion that is incredibly dismissive of a precedent that is bedrock. The writing exudes hostility.” No kidding.

“Until the latter part of the 20th century,” writes Alito, “there was no support in American law for a constituti­onal right to obtain an abortion. Zero. None. … Abortion had long been a crime in every single State.” (Legal scholars say he is dead wrong about that.)

Many of the personal liberties we now consider fundamenta­l are what Gans calls “rights of heart and home” — like abortion and

interracia­l and same-sex marriage — and are not enumerated in the Constituti­on. They find their justificat­ion in the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause. The 14th Amendment was written after the Civil War specifical­ly to protect the rights of once-enslaved Americans who were being revictimiz­ed by a raft of restrictiv­e, racist laws in Southern states. Fresh in memory were the horrors of slavery, where families were ripped apart and women were forced to bear children born into slavery. Among the legislator­s’ intentions, said Gans, was the protection of bodily integrity and the integrity of the family.

“When they debated it,” said Gans, “members of Congress who wrote the 14th Amendment talked about the right to have a wife, children and family. What definition of freedom doesn’t include these things?”

People who worry that overturnin­g Roe and Casey is just the beginning of a dark age for liberty are right to be alarmed. Alito’s draft opinion, Gans said, “is written in a way that emboldens more attacks on core precedents that guarantee fundamenta­l rights.”

We can’t take anything for granted.

Just before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings for thenSuprem­e Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, Tennessee Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn criticized the landmark 1965 Supreme Court ruling that legalized access to contracept­ion as “constituti­onally unsound.” (She also included the 2012 Supreme Court ruling that upheld the legality of the Affordable Care Act in her list of unsound decisions.)

And don’t forget another landmark decision, Obergefell vs. Hodges, which legalized same-sex marriage in 2015 by a sliver on a 5-4 vote. Two years ago, after the court refused to hear an appeal from a Kentucky county clerk who cited her religious beliefs as the reason she would not issue marriage licenses to gay couples, Justices Clarence Thomas and Alito issued a blistering statement against Obergefell itself.

“By choosing to privilege a novel constituti­onal right over the religious liberty interests explicitly protected in the 1st Amendment, and by doing so undemocrat­ically, the Court has created a problem that only it can fix,” they wrote. “Until then, Obergefell will continue to have ‘ruinous consequenc­es for religious liberty.’ ”

How might the court want to “fix” that?

Oh, I’m sure you can guess.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS gather outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday after a draft opinion was published that showed the court’s conservati­ve majority is poised to overturn Roe vs. Wade.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS gather outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday after a draft opinion was published that showed the court’s conservati­ve majority is poised to overturn Roe vs. Wade.
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