The Standard Journal

Supreme Court’s interest in Texas abortion ban could signal the end of Roe v. Wade

- By Todd J. Gillman

WASHINGTON — Since 2013, more than a dozen states have tried to ban abortion as soon as a sonogram can pick up the thump-thump of an embryonic heartbeat.

That’s about six weeks, an egregious constituti­onal affront under Roe vs. Wade. No court has allowed a ban so early in pregnancy to stand.

The Supreme Court never even granted an appeal — until Texas concocted Senate Bill 8.

What grabbed the Supreme Court’s attention, prompting two hours of oral arguments scheduled Monday, isn’t the six-week ban, which clearly violates Roe, but the way the law outsources enforcemen­t to legal bounty hunters in an effort to evade judicial review.

A ruling could come quickly, and it will focus on whether Texas achieved its goal of crafting a law immune from challenge by anyone, including the federal government and abortion providers.

That’s an important question, as other red states consider copycat laws. But it means SB 8 won’t be the vehicle the conservati­ve majority uses to toss Roe on the scrap heap with Dred Scott and other landmarks the court came to regret.

The fact they let SB 8 take effect on Sept. 1 is a strong omen that Roe’s days could be numbered, though.

“Pro-life advocates are energized and excited. The court has declined every opportunit­y to block SB 8,” said Kyleen Wright, president of Texans for Life Coalition. “That just gives everyone more hope and anticipati­on of what they’re planning to do with Dobbs.”

The court will hear arguments Dec. 1 in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on, involving a 15-week ban in Mississipp­i intended as a test case that might topple Roe.

“We may get some tea leaves from (Monday’s) argument, but I would be very surprised if there were major changes that come directly out of it,” said I. Glenn Cohen, deputy dean of Harvard Law School and an expert on medical ethics and the law. “If there is going to be a big change in abortion law itself, i.e., what the Constituti­on prohibits states from doing, that’s likely to come at least initially in Dobbs.”

Under Roe, the state’s interest in protecting the fetus outweighs a woman’s right to bodily autonomy once the fetus could survive outside the womb. That’s about 22 to 24 weeks.

For decades, courts have enforced Roe by stopping prosecutor­s and police from enforcing certain restrictio­ns.

Under SB 8, there’s no official to enjoin.

The self-preservati­on mechanisms built into SB 8 are so complete that doctors aren’t even allowed to defend themselves against lawsuits by pointing out that the six-week ban is unconstitu­tional.

Even the most ardent anti-abortion activists were dubious as the bill worked through the Legislatur­e.

“We had concerns that SB 8 would not survive a federal court challenge even back during the spring,” said Joe Pojman, executive director of Texas Alliance for Life, who said he privately urged key Texas lawmakers to think twice.

Roe is a “terrible precedent” that “ties the hands of the Legislatur­e from protecting unborn babies before the point of viability,” Pojman said, but it is, unequivoca­lly, the law of the land unless the Supreme Court says otherwise.

That’s exactly why the court needs to strike down SB 8, say the Justice Department and abortion providers who’ll plead the case Monday.

Texas’ solicitor general, Judd Stone, will defend the law before the court, along with a lawyer for a group of private citizens who want to file lawsuits under SB 8.

The Biden administra­tion’s solicitor general Elizabeth Prelogar, confirmed by the Senate only on Thursday, will argue the case for the Justice Department.

A pro-life activist holds up a baby doll during a rally for a ban on abortion in front of the U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 12, 2021, before oral arguments in Cameron v. EMW Women’s Surgical Center, a case revolving around a Kentucky effort to ban of a surgical procedure commonly used in the second trimester.

In 2020, Texas residents terminated 55,175 pregnancie­s. That’s 20,000 more than in 1974, the first full year after Roe, and about half the annual peak in the early 1980s.

From Jan. 1 through the end of May — the most recent official data available — the state counted 24,667 abortions in Texas, a somewhat higher annual pace.

The vast majority of those, 82%, were performed in the first eight weeks, and a study released Friday suggested that the number of abortions has been cut in half under SB 8.

Texas keeps detailed data on abortions and a picture emerges of the average patient.

She’s most likely in her late 20s, almost certainly unwed, a bit more likely to be Latino than white or Black.

She probably has a child already; 60% of abortion patients have given birth at least once.

She just realized she was pregnant. Six weeks into a pregnancy is just two weeks after a missed period — if this woman happens to have a regular cycle, which many don’t.

North Dakota became the first state to adopt a fetal heartbeat law in 2013. A dozen states followed suit.

The only such statute to take effect is SB 8, which includes this definition: “‘Fetal heartbeat’ means cardiac activity or the steady and repetitive rhythmic contractio­n of the fetal heart within the gestationa­l sac.”

In literal terms, there won’t be a heartbeat for months beyond the point at which these measures outlaw abortion.

“The term ‘fetal heart-beat’ is misleading and divorced from the latest medical science when used to describe embryonic cardiac activity at early gestation,” the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts explained to the justices ahead of Monday’s hearing in a friend of the court brief.

Dr. Nisha Verma, a fellow with the ob/gyn group, put it in layman’s terms.

“A heartbeat is the sound created by the opening and closing of cardiac valves,” she said. “What people think of as a heartbeat in early pregnancy is actually created by electric impulses. … There are no cardiac valves. … Those electric impulses do not make the sound of a heartbeat on their own.”

More to the point, she said, the sound produced by these electrical impulses thrills parents-to-be, but it’s far from a marker of viability and it “is not a particular­ly important part of fetal cardiac developmen­t.”

Two rulings set the contours of abortion rights and regulation­s.

In 1973, the court struck down a Texas ban challenged by a Dallas woman known in court as Jane Roe, later identified as Norma McCorvey, who had sued Henry Wade, the longtime Dallas district attorney.

“It started here and it ends here is something that we like to say, especially in the Dallas area,” said Wright, head of Texans for Life Coalition.

In 1992, a bitterly divided court reaffirmed Roe in Planned Parenthood vs. Casey.

But the court also used Casey to provide guidance to states, allowing restrictio­ns that don’t impose an “undue burden,” defined as a “substantia­l obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion before the fetus attains viability.”

Applying that test, the court let stand Pennsylvan­ia’s 24-hour waiting period, and parental consent for minors, but struck down a requiremen­t that married women notify their husbands before they could terminate a pregnancy.

States got the message and many began to test the limits of Casey.

In 2003, Texas passed the “Women’s Right to Know Act,” requiring pre-abortion counseling that includes informatio­n designed to discourage patients from going through with it, then a 24hour waiting period.

Women who live within 100 miles of the provider must get the counseling in person. Starting at 16 weeks, abortions must be performed in an ambulatory surgical center; none of the 54 abortion clinics in Texas met the standard when the law took effect.

In 2005, Texas banned abortions after 24 weeks and began to require parental consent for anyone under 18 seeking an abortion.

In 2011, Texas began to require a sonogram at least 24 hours before an abortion. Doctors are required to show the image, make the fetal heartbeat audible, and give a verbal explanatio­n of the results.

In 2013, Texas adopted House Bill 2, after a dramatic filibuster by Democrat Wendy Davis, then a state senator from Fort Worth, that quashed an earlier version. Abortion after 20 weeks was banned, with exceptions to save the woman’s life or in case of severe medical problem with the fetus.

In 2016, the Supreme Court invoked Casey when it struck down two new Texas restrictio­ns in Whole Woman’s Health vs. Hellersted­t, a challenge from the same abortion provider challengin­g SB 8. The law at issue required clinics to meet the standards of ambulatory surgical centers, and doctors to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles.

In 2017, Texas banned the most common procedure for second-trimester abortions. A court blocked that as an undue burden.

In 2019, Texas made it a crime to withhold medical treatment from a fetus born alive — a scenario doctors say doesn’t and can’t occur, because of the 20-week ban.

Until the Trump era, there was no question the court would reject a 15-week ban like Mississipp­i’s.

But with a 6-3 conservati­ve majority now a year old, the judicial landscape has never been more favorable for those attacking Roe.

It takes four of nine justices to grant a hearing. It’s unclear if there’s a fifth willing to overturn Roe.

“I’ve been involved in the prolife movement for 34 years and my hopes have been dashed several times,” said Pojman. “But this time I truly am hopeful that Roe could be substantia­lly modified or overturned.”

 ?? Erin schaff-Pool/Getty Images north america/Tns ?? Members of the Supreme Court pose for a group photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on April 23. Seated from left: Associate Justice Samuel Alito, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts, Associate Justice Stephen Breyer and Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Standing from left: Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Associate Justice Elena Kagan, Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch and Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett. The Supreme Court’s interest in the Texas abortion case has some believing it could lead to the end of Roe v. Wade.
Erin schaff-Pool/Getty Images north america/Tns Members of the Supreme Court pose for a group photo at the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on April 23. Seated from left: Associate Justice Samuel Alito, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts, Associate Justice Stephen Breyer and Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Standing from left: Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Associate Justice Elena Kagan, Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch and Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett. The Supreme Court’s interest in the Texas abortion case has some believing it could lead to the end of Roe v. Wade.

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