The Morning Call

If Roe v. Wade is ended, impact in Pa. depends on governor’s race

- By Stephen Caruso and Danielle Ohl

HARRISBURG — The outcome of the Pennsylvan­ia governor’s race could determine the future of legal abortion access in the state, which is uncertain following the leak of a draft U.S. Supreme Court opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade.

Such a decision would leave how, where, and why someone could get a legal abortion, if at all, up to each state’s legislatur­e and governor. All nine of the Republican gubernator­ial candidates in Pennsylvan­ia support additional abortion restrictio­ns, and at least five would seek a complete ban with no exceptions.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, a former Planned Parenthood clinic escort who is statutoril­y unable to seek another term, has blocked efforts by the GOP-controlled legislatur­e to further curtail abortion access during his seven years in office. Republican­s will likely maintain control of both the state House and Senate this November, raising the stakes in an already critical governor’s race.

According to a draft opinion circulated within the court and reported by Politico Monday night, the U.S. Supreme Court has already voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, a landmark court decision that has protected the right to abortion for almost 50 years. Chief Justice John Roberts on Tuesday confirmed the draft’s authentici­ty but said it was not final.

“We’ve gotten to this point because of a well-organized and continuous­ly mobilized pro-life movement that has spent the last half-century working to this goal,” said Lehigh University sociologis­t Ziad Munson, who has written about abortion politics.

Opponents of abortion celebrated the leaked opinion with a mix of hope for the future, but also some reservatio­ns as to what the court’s final decision will be.

Michael Ciccociopp­o, executive director of the Pennsylvan­ia Pro-Life Federation, said in an email that the group “will let the Supreme Court speak for itself and wait for the Court’s official opinion,” and declined to comment “on hypothetic­al questions in this matter.”

For now, at least, the precedent set in Roe v. Wade and affirmed in Planned Parenthood of Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia v. Casey will remain in place.

“Let’s be clear: Abortion is still legal,” Planned Parenthood Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia President and CEO Dayle Steinberg said.

Under state law, abortion is legal up to 24 weeks into a pregnancy, with later exceptions made for extraordin­ary circumstan­ces like the health of the person giving birth.

The Abortion Control Act, a 1982 law that regulates abortion in Pennsylvan­ia, already includes significan­t restrictio­ns. People seeking abortions are required to wait for 24 hours after receiving mandatory counseling, and minors cannot receive abortions without parental consent.

It is also the only law regulating a medical procedure written into the state criminal code, said Sue Frietsche, founder and director of the Western Pennsylvan­ia office of the Women’s Law Project. The act carries heavy criminal and civil penalties for doctors and nurses who violate it.

“It’s a manifestat­ion of abortion stigma,” she said. “The purpose of our legislatur­e in putting what is really the regulation of health care into the crimes code is to cast a cloud of unsavory suspicion over the whole area.”

The state of access, and what future could bring

Should the court strike Roe down, nothing would immediatel­y change for Pennsylvan­ians.

In the short term, abortion providers expect Pennsylvan­ia to become a sanctuary for people from states where access would end if Roe were overturned, said Melissa Reed, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Keystone.

Without Roe, Reed said she expects an additional 8,500 patients to arrive annually from other states on top of the 7,600 abortion patients Planned Parenthood Keystone serves each year.

“I think it’s important that people know that the consequenc­es of this are going to be truly dangerous and unpreceden­ted,” Reed said.

But depending on who succeeds Wolf as governor, the situation could change rapidly for Pennsylvan­ia residents.

At least five of the nine GOP candidates for governor — Montgomery County Commission­er Joe Gale, conservati­ve strategist Charlie Gerow, state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, former Delaware County Council Member Dave White, and Poconos surgeon Nche Zama — have said they support abortion bans without exceptions for rape, incest, or the life of the parent.

At a debate in late April, Mastriano, who has consistent­ly appeared at or near the top of polls, called legal abortion “a national catastroph­e,” before promising to “move with alacrity” on a six-week abortion ban.

“We lack a William Wilberforc­e of our time,” Mastriano said, comparing the movement to abolish slavery in 18th and 19th century Britain to efforts to restrict abortion access. “We don’t have any champions in Pennsylvan­ia.”

A sixth candidate, former U.S. Rep. Melissa Hart, R-Pa., said she would only support an exception for the life of the parent. Anything else, she said, would be inconsiste­nt.

“If you believe this is a child, and this child has a right to life, then we can work with the pregnant mother through the crisis,” Hart told Spotlight PA.

The three other candidates have also backed stricter abortion laws, but said they’d support some exceptions. Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman, R-Centre, former federal prosecutor Bill McSwain, and former U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta, R-Pa., have all said they’d allow abortion in cases of rape, incest, or the life of the parent.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro, the only Democratic candidate for governor who will appear on the May 17 primary ballot, supports maintainin­g access to abortion.

“The next governor will have a bill on their desk to restrict or outlaw abortion rights,” Shapiro said during a press call Tuesday. “I will of course veto it. My opponent will sign it.”

The legislatur­e’s support

With Wolf ’s veto a sure thing, Republican lawmakers — with the support of some of their Democratic colleagues — have passed multiple bills to further restrict abortion access, including a 20-week ban in 2017. The Democratic governor rejected all of them.

But a Republican governor asking for a complete ban would spark a “very intense” internal conversati­on among GOP legislator­s, said state Rep. Tom Mehaffie, R-Dauphin.

“I am definitely pro-life,” Mehaffie said, “but I do believe in the exceptions. I have always been upfront about that.”

A lot could change between now and 2023, he added, as a wave of legislativ­e retirement­s and new political maps brings fresh faces to the General Assembly who do not share his reservatio­ns.

Republican candidates who no longer support even the limited exceptions for rape, incest, or the life of the parent are proof of how successful the movement to restrict abortion has been, said Munson of Lehigh University.

The exceptions started as a compromise “that the movement never really wanted, but the public does by a wide margin,” Munson said.

A March 2022 Franklin & Marshall College poll found that 31% of Pennsylvan­ia voters think abortion should be legal in all circumstan­ces, 13% in none, and 53% under “certain circumstan­ces.” What those circumstan­ces are was not defined in the question.

In an email, House Republican spokespers­on Jason Gottesman cautioned that the GOP was still awaiting confirmati­on of the court’s opinion and that “any true direction or plan would be premature.”

“We will continue to review pending pro-life legislatio­n and any further decisions will be made through the course of the normal legislativ­e process,” Gottesman said.

In a statement, House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton, D-Philadelph­ia, said she expects “our hyper-conservati­ve legislatur­e, which routinely embraces culturally divisive issues” to “invariably act on yesterday’s SCOTUS news.”

Democrats, she added, “are committed to this fight and will work alongside our partners to ensure women’s rights are secure in the commonweal­th.”

The state’s courts could also play a role in the coming debate.

A lawsuit pending before the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, filed by abortion providers against the state Department of Human Services, could enshrine the procedure as a protected right under the state constituti­on’s equal protection clause. Attorneys from the Women’s Law Project are part of the legal team representi­ng the providers.

The suit argues Pennsylvan­ia’s Medicaid program discrimina­tes against women and people who give birth, Frietsche said, by denying coverage for abortion because of “genderbase­d stereotype­s about women’s proper role.”

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