Since Justice Samuel Alito’s draft majority opinion
striking down Roe v. Wade was
leaked on Monday, it has been widely
denounced as extremist to the point of being radical. The outcome of the
opinion itself was not surprising to court-watchers, though. Many have anticipated that the conservative-packed Supreme
Court would be issuing a ruling striking down the constitutional right to an
abortion, or whittling it down to all but a dead letter.
What many did not anticipate, though, were the
startling implications of the way in which Alito reached his opinion. The ultraconservative George W.
Bush appointee’s opinion coarsened the abortion debate by vilifying
“abortionists” and “murderess[es],” opened the door to the court abolishing other unenumerated rights
rooted in the 14th Amendment such as the right to birth control and
freedom to marry, and allowed for the possibility
that legislators might punish people who don’t get an abortion but exercise basic freedoms—such as drinking
coffee—during pregnancy in a way that might be harmful to “prenatal life at all
stages of development.”
It’s worth considering the most extreme lines in
Alito’s full 98-page opinion to fully understand just how much Alito has
adopted the most extreme and dangerous views of the
anti-abortion movement.
Constitutional rights not “rooted in the Nation’s
history and tradition,” such as the right to an abortion, are not legitimate
rights at all.
Alito repeatedly claims that his opinion only covers abortion
and should not “be understood to cast doubt on precedents that do not concern
abortion.” But if you read the opinion in its entirety, it’s clear that Alito
lays down the future groundwork for overturning any number of “fundamental”
rights that purportedly do not have grounding “in our Nation’s history.” Alito
lays out why such unenumerated rights grounded in “a right to privacy, which is
… not mentioned” in the Constitution are bad:
The Court has
long been “reluctant” to recognize rights that are not mentioned in the Constitution.
… “Substantive due process has at time been a treacherous field for this
Court,” … and it has sometimes led the Court to usurp authority that the
Constitution entrusts to the people’s elected representatives. Sometimes the court has overstepped in accepting these
rights, Alito notes:
On
occasion, when the Court has ignored the “[a]ppropriate limits” imposed by
“respect for teachings of history,” … it has fallen into the freewheeling
judicial policymaking. … The Court must not fall prey to such an unprincipled
approach.
Again, these statements implicate all of the “liberty-based” rights listed above. For good measure, Alito lets us know which other rights were not “mentioned in the Constitution” or allegedly grounded in our nation’s history: interracial marriage, contraception, the right not to be non-consensually sterilized, the right to reside with relatives, the right to make decisions about your children’s education, the “right to engage in consensual” and private “same-sex intimacy,” and the right to same sex marriage, just to name a few.
Alito justifies overturning
nearly 50 years of precedent because he says women don’t have any real reliance
on Roe.
Alito writes of the 1992 ruling Planned
Parenthood v. Casey—which struck down a Pennsylvania law that would
have required married women seeking an abortion to notify their husbands—that
the court came up with a phony reliance interest to justify upholding Roe on the basis of stare decisis. In his draft,
Alito notes that women’s reliance on abortion is of a lower order than the
reliance interests that arise “in cases involving property and contract
rights.” The court, he writes, is “ill-equipped to assess ‘generalized
assertions about the national psyche,’ ” with respect to the way abortion
figures in the lives of women across the country. It’s thus impossible to say,
according to Alito, that women rely on Roe:
When
a concrete reliance interest is asserted, courts are equipped to evaluate the
claim, but assessing the novel and intangible form of reliance endorsed by the Casey plurality is another matter. That form of
reliance depends on an empirical question that is hard for anyone—and in
particular, for a court—to assess, namely, the effect of the abortion right on
society and in particular on the lives of women.
Alito cites outdated
science and questionable common law from the 17th and 18th centuries to justify
abortion bans that would criminalize women for terminating their pregnancies.
Alito writes: an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal
punishment persisted from the earliest days of the common law until 1973.
In delving into this ahistorical analysis, Alito uses the
creepiest possible terminology to describe what has been for the last 50 years
a common and legal medical practice. He repeatedly refers to reproductive care
providers as “abortionists.” He obsesses over pre-Victorian medical terms with
contested meanings, such as “quickening.”
Sir Edward
Coke’s 17th-century treatise likewise asserted that abortion of a quick child
was “murder” if the “childe be born alive” and a “great misprision” if the
“childe dieth in her body.”
Alito also approvingly cites language describing one
woman who had received an abortion as a “murderess.” And he considers other
random 17th century punishments for abortion: In 1732, for example, Eleanor
Beare was convicted of ‘destroying the Foetus in the Womb’ of another woman and
‘there-by causing her to miscarry.’ For that crime and another ‘misdemeanor,’
Baere was sentenced to two days in the pillory and three years’ imprisonment
Alito lays out what he calls a “proto-felony-murder
rule” categorizing failed abortions
that kill the mother as criminal. As if these passages aren’t a disturbing
enough foray into questionable science and morality from an era in which women
and children were regarded as property of their husbands, he presses on into
the 19th century to suggest that the reproductive health care practices of the
time were somehow more “scientific” than modern practices. To do this he cites
approvingly an 1848 case and terms like “in ventre sa
mere”:
The Solicitor
General offers a different explanation of the basis for the quickening rule,
namely, that before quickening the common law did not regard a fetus “as having
a ‘separate and independent existence.’” … But the case on which the Solicitor
General relies for this proposition also suggested that the criminal law’s
quickening rule was out of step with the treatment of prenatal life in other
areas of law, noting that “to many purposes, in reference to civil rights, an
infant in ventre sa mere is regarded as a person in
being.”
Again, Alito leaves the door open for “personhood”
legislation, or even a future ruling recognizing the “personhood” of a fetus: But even if
one takes the view that “personhood” begins when a certain attribute or
combination of attributes is acquired, it is very hard to see why viability should
mark the point where “personhood” begins. What are
Alito’s primary sources for this dubious framework? One is a 1732 journal
called Gentleman’s Magazine.
Alito misleadingly cites court precedent to claim
that banning abortion is definitively not sex discrimination.
Alito argues: State’s regulation of abortion is not a sex-based classification
and is thus not subject to the “heightened scrutiny” that applies to such
classifications.
To make this claim he cites two cases, one post-Roe and another post-Casey.
Those are 1974’s Geduldig v. Aiello and
1993’s Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic. But those
cases were about disability rights for women who experienced complications
during pregnancy and the First Amendment rights of anti-abortion protesters,
not about abortion itself. Most notably, Alito claims that the Bray court decided the “ ‘goal of preventing
abortion’ does not constitute ‘invidiously discriminatory animus against
women.’ ” Again, though, that case was about protesters
seeking to prevent women from having abortions, not the state
mandating an abortion ban. What Bray actually
says is this:
Whether
one agrees or disagrees with the goal of preventing abortion, that goal in
itself (apart from the use of unlawful means to achieve it, which is not
relevant to our discussion of animus) does not remotely qualify for such harsh
description, and for such derogatory association with racism. The key qualifier there is “apart from use of unlawful
means to achieve it.” One year earlier, the court had upheld Roe in Casey and
determined that abortion bans were an “unlawful means to achieve it.”
Alito frames himself as a champion of women, who can
now decide these issues at the ballot box—without acknowledging those ballot
boxes have been rigged by Supreme Court decisions eviscerating voting rights.
Our decision
returns the issue of abortion to those legislative bodies and it allows women
on both sides of the abortion issue to seek to affect the legislative process
by influencing public opinion, lobbying legislators, voting, and running for
office.
Alito compares Roe and Casey to some of the
most abhorrent precedents in Supreme Court history, including the ruling that
upheld segregation.
An erroneous
interpretation of the Constitution is always important, but some are more
damaging than others. The infamous decision in Plessy v.
Ferguson … was one such decision. It betrayed our commitment
to “equality under law.” … It was “egregiously wrong” on the day it was
decided. … Roe was also egregiously wrong and deeply
damaging.
Finally, Alito lays
out a laundry list of reasons lawmakers can and have to ban all abortions,
including such Orwellian straw men as “discrimination on the basis of … sex”
and “the protection of maternal health”:
A law regulating abortion, like other health and welfare laws, is entitled to a “strong presumption of validity.” It must be sustained if there is a rational basis on which the legislature could have thought that it would serve legitimate state interests. … These legitimate interests include respect for and preservation of prenatal life at all stages of development …; the protection of maternal health and safety; the elimination of particularly gruesome or barbaric medical procedures; the preservation of the integrity of the medical profession; the mitigation of fetal pain; and the prevention of discrimination on the basis of race, sex, or disability.
-Jeremy Stahl
Read: Why Alito Can’t Find the Right to Abortion in
the Constitution
Read more of Slate’s coverage on abortion rights
here.
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