Royal Oak Tribune

Poll: High court approval drops after abortion opinion leak

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON » Public approval of the Supreme Court has fallen following the leak of a draft opinion that would overturn the Roe v. Wade decision guaranteei­ng abortion rights nationwide, according to a poll.

Disapprova­l of the nation’s highest court was especially pronounced among the roughly twothirds of U.S. adults who oppose overturnin­g Roe, while support for the court was high among those in favor, according to the Marquette Law School Poll, which also found increased partisan polarizati­on in approval.

The draft opinion obtained by Politico would overrule Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the 1992 decision that reaffirmed the right to end a pregnancy. Chief Justice John Roberts confirmed the draft was authentic and ordered an investigat­ion, led by Supreme Court Marshal Gail Curley, to try to find the source of the leak.

The official opinion is expected to be released sometime in the next month. The case involves a Mississipp­i law that would prohibit abortion after 15 weeks, but if the justices go further and eliminate the abortion right first announced in Roe, roughly half the states are expected to ban or severely restrict abortion.

In the Marquette poll, 55% disapprove of the court, up from 45% in March. Approval was down a correspond­ing 10 percentage points, from 54% to 44%.

Among people who oppose overturnin­g Roe, 74% disapprove­d of the court in the new poll, compared with 54% in March. Eightyfour percent of those who favor jettisonin­g the court’s main abortion precedents voiced approval of the institutio­n, up from 65% two months ago.

Approval was fairly steady among Republican­s from March to May, but fell sharply among Democrats and slightly among independen­ts.

The survey, conducted starting about a week after the leaked document, shows further erosion in public support for the court; confidence in the court had started to decline in polling last year.

In September, the Marquette Law School Poll, among other surveys, found a drop in approval of the court following its vote to allow a restrictiv­e Texas abortion law to take effect.

Views on abortion in the new poll were consistent with earlier surveys, with about two-thirds of U.S. adults saying they oppose overturnin­g Roe.

Other polls, including those conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, also have consistent­ly shown only about 1 in 10 Americans want abortion to be illegal in all cases. A majority are in favor of abortion being legal in all or most circumstan­ces, but polls indicate many also support restrictio­ns especially later in pregnancy.

The new Marquette poll showed Americans were evenly divided over the Mississipp­i law outlawing most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, similar to views earlier in the year.

The poll of 1,004 adults was conducted May 9-19 using a sample drawn from the probabilit­y-based SSRS Opinion Panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondent­s is plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Abortion-rights demonstrat­ors coming from the Washington Monument march past the Supreme Court in Washington.
PHOTOS BY JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Abortion-rights demonstrat­ors coming from the Washington Monument march past the Supreme Court in Washington.
 ?? ?? An entrance to the U.S. Capitol is secured ahead of an abortion rights demonstrat­ors march, May 14, to the Supreme Court in Washington, during protests across the country.
An entrance to the U.S. Capitol is secured ahead of an abortion rights demonstrat­ors march, May 14, to the Supreme Court in Washington, during protests across the country.

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