Texarkana Gazette

Pro-lifers shoud not fear a post-Roe backlash

- Ramesh Ponnuru

For the first time since 1992, the end of Roe v. Wade is a real possibilit­y. Back then, the Supreme Court defied widespread expectatio­ns by sticking with the 1973 ruling’s core holding that legislatur­es could not prohibit abortion. A lot of Republican politician­s were relieved because they thought that a reversal by the court would have caused a political backlash. (They lost the next election anyway.)

The circumstan­ces are different now, as a Supreme Court with six Republican­appointed justices takes up a case about Mississipp­i’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks. If the conservati­ve justices think that Roe should go, they could hardly have found a more propitious time from the perspectiv­e of the prolife movement.

The backlash theory is based on polls that find broad public support for Roe and opposition to overturnin­g it. They also generally find opposition to a total ban on abortion.

But public opinion on abortion is complicate­d. Other polls find that most people also hold views that are incompatib­le with Roe, such as thinking that abortion should be allowed only in a few circumstan­ces and not in the second trimester. A lot of people are ambivalent about abortion and not well versed in the particular­s of Roe and the implicatio­ns of overturnin­g it. Many Americans — roughly two-thirds, by one estimate — are under the impression that overturnin­g Roe would ban all abortion nationwide.

It wouldn’t. If the court overturns Roe, its most likely ruling is that the Constituti­on lets legislatur­es set abortion policy. No justice has ever written an opinion urging the court to rule that abortion must be illegal.

If a pro-life Republican were president when Roe was overturned, it would be easier for supporters of abortion to capitalize on public worry that abortion policy was about to shift too far, too fast. But we instead have a Democratic president who is committed to legal abortion. If the court overturned Roe, President Joe Biden would urge Congress, also led by Democrats who favor legal abortion, to pass a law protecting it. That prominent pushback would make it harder to sustain the fiction that back-alley abortions were about to become commonplac­e.

Even better for pro-lifers, it’s unlikely that Democrats could pass an abortion-protecting law. A bill to block states from restrictin­g abortion would be subject to the filibuster. There are more than enough opponents of abortion in the Senate to sustain one.

With Washington deadlocked, much of the debate over abortion policy would move to the states. Some states would move to ban nearly all abortions, others to ban most of them, still others to ban them after the first trimester. Pro-lifers would not win all of these fights. But since the court’s decisions in Roe and other cases have effectivel­y required that abortion be legal at any stage of pregnancy, they will have plenty of room to make progress.

When conservati­ve states have acted on legislatio­n about controvers­ial social issues in recent years, they have often faced a buzz saw of negative press and corporate pressure. In the aftermath of a decision overturnin­g Roe, however, several states would be moving against abortion, with support from local voters. No state would have to stand alone against a national campaign of intimidati­on.

All of these features of a possible post-Roe landscape — the complexity of public opinion, the closely divided national government, the dynamics of federalism — would tend to defuse any sense that the Supreme Court had dropped a bomb. They would also work against complacenc­y on the part of pro-life citizens, who have usually been more likely to vote based on their views on abortion than their opponents have.

State-by-state legislativ­e battles would surely stretch for many years, with reversals and strife guaranteed. But they would be likely to leave more Americans living under abortion laws they favor: Liberal states would continue to have laws permitting abortion for any reason, while conservati­ve ones would provide greater protection­s for unborn children. The struggle could also normalize a new status quo of legislativ­e back-and-forth, making pro-life policy proposals seem less threatenin­g and radical to voters in the middle.

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