Supreme Court Votes 6 - 3 to Overturn Casey and Roe

68,201 Views | 623 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by chazzed
DiabloWags
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Collins and Murkowski had introduced a narrower bill to protect abortion rights, but they oppose weakening the 60 vote threshold and were extremely unlikely to flip while Democrats control the chamber.

Not sure why some people continue to ignore this most salient fact.


Democrats Plan a Bid to Codify Roe, but Lack the Votes to Succeed - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
juarezbear
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DiabloWags said:

Collins and Murkowski had introduced a narrower bill to protect abortion rights, but they oppose weakening the 60 vote threshold and were extremely unlikely to flip while Democrats control the chamber.

Not sure why some people continue to ignore this most salient fact.


Democrats Plan a Bid to Codify Roe, but Lack the Votes to Succeed - The New York Times (nytimes.com)


Thanks for posting. They were both duped.
sycasey
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wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

white President and white senators would rather have abortion right as a fund raising and mid-terms vote puling devise for the masses of women who will die traveling to a nearby state. It's on you white buddy., and you're four your old thought concepts of blame
What a crock. Show me the 50 votes to terminate the filibuster. You can't and so you are just plain full of it.
I claim you can't read. Did you even open the link to the Politico article? I didn't come up with 2 GOP senators, they did.
Who can't read? You are making a fool of yourself.

"The failed vote is the latest example of the constraints Democrats face in a 50-50 Senate. While the possible reversal of Roe has some senators calling for a workaround or end to the legislative filibuster to pass abortion rights legislation, there's zero chance of that happening this Congress given opposition from Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.). Further, even if they could kill or amend the filibuster, Democrats don't even have a simple majority that would vote to enact federal protections for abortion."


Let's do the math.

From the article: " Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who support abortion rights, opposed the Democratic bill. They see that legislation as too expansive and are instead pushing a narrower alternative that would codify the Roe and Casey decisions the Supreme Court is expected to overturn."

So Roe and Casey could have been codified because Collins and Murkowski were prepared to vote that way. Substitute Collins and Murkowski for Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema in your prior sentence and your argument becomes BS.
Does your math get them to 60 votes to override the inevitable filibuster? Will Collins and Murkowski commit to that?
wifeisafurd
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DiabloWags said:

sycasey said:

wifeisafurd said:



I'm not arguing (nor is anyone else that I saw that there were no state trigger laws. What I am saying is the Democratic majority (along with some Republicans) could have provided there own trigger law to override the states, but instead decided to not do that to keep the abortion issue alive for their political benefit and to protect Democratic senators in pro life states..
The Democratic majority has never had enough votes to override a filibuster and codify Roe.

Why does Furd continue to repeat something that wasnt even remotely possible?
It's bizarre.

MS. PSAKI: "Well, I think it's important to note that there has been a vote on this; it failed. It did not have even 50 votes, which means even if the filibuster were overturned, there would have not had been enough votes to get this passed. He has stated this many times publicly. This is his known position. This is many of one of many topics he discusses with lawmakers."

"We've been down this road once already. There aren't enough horses to do it," said Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.).
"Nothing's changed."


For a guy that goes off on people's literacy, you clearly don't seem to get it on the legal side and are reduced to complaining about things you know not.


From various news sources: " Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who support abortion rights, opposed the Democratic bill. They see that legislation as too expansive and are instead pushing a narrower alternative that would codify the Roe and Casey decisions the Supreme Court is expected to overturn." So when Psaki is not telling you is that the legislation that the Dems pushed was far beyond Roe and Casey, and they could have had the bill over the objection of pro-life Manchin that would have codified Roe and Wade, but the Dems stuck in a bunch of other stuff to avoid having the bill passed with Colins and Murkowsi on board.

As for filibusters, the Senate by a mere majority vote for a rule change can remove a matter from the 60 vote filibuster requirement, and both parties have done so; for example, when it comes to voting on judges. Collins and
Murkowski were prepared to vote with the Dems to do so.


Why do continue to be so illiterate on legal matters?
wifeisafurd
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sycasey said:

wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

white President and white senators would rather have abortion right as a fund raising and mid-terms vote puling devise for the masses of women who will die traveling to a nearby state. It's on you white buddy., and you're four your old thought concepts of blame
What a crock. Show me the 50 votes to terminate the filibuster. You can't and so you are just plain full of it.
I claim you can't read. Did you even open the link to the Politico article? I didn't come up with 2 GOP senators, they did.
Who can't read? You are making a fool of yourself.

"The failed vote is the latest example of the constraints Democrats face in a 50-50 Senate. While the possible reversal of Roe has some senators calling for a workaround or end to the legislative filibuster to pass abortion rights legislation, there's zero chance of that happening this Congress given opposition from Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.). Further, even if they could kill or amend the filibuster, Democrats don't even have a simple majority that would vote to enact federal protections for abortion."


Let's do the math.

From the article: " Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who support abortion rights, opposed the Democratic bill. They see that legislation as too expansive and are instead pushing a narrower alternative that would codify the Roe and Casey decisions the Supreme Court is expected to overturn."

So Roe and Casey could have been codified because Collins and Murkowski were prepared to vote that way. Substitute Collins and Murkowski for Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema in your prior sentence and your argument becomes BS.
Does your math get them to 60 votes to override the inevitable filibuster? Will Collins and Murkowski commit to that?
The Senate by a mere majority vote for a rule change can remove a matter from the 60 vote filibuster requirement, and both parties have done so; for example, when it comes to voting on judges. Collins and
Murkowski said they were prepared to vote with the Dems to do so.
sycasey
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wifeisafurd said:

sycasey said:

wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

white President and white senators would rather have abortion right as a fund raising and mid-terms vote puling devise for the masses of women who will die traveling to a nearby state. It's on you white buddy., and you're four your old thought concepts of blame
What a crock. Show me the 50 votes to terminate the filibuster. You can't and so you are just plain full of it.
I claim you can't read. Did you even open the link to the Politico article? I didn't come up with 2 GOP senators, they did.
Who can't read? You are making a fool of yourself.

"The failed vote is the latest example of the constraints Democrats face in a 50-50 Senate. While the possible reversal of Roe has some senators calling for a workaround or end to the legislative filibuster to pass abortion rights legislation, there's zero chance of that happening this Congress given opposition from Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.). Further, even if they could kill or amend the filibuster, Democrats don't even have a simple majority that would vote to enact federal protections for abortion."


Let's do the math.

From the article: " Sens. Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), who support abortion rights, opposed the Democratic bill. They see that legislation as too expansive and are instead pushing a narrower alternative that would codify the Roe and Casey decisions the Supreme Court is expected to overturn."

So Roe and Casey could have been codified because Collins and Murkowski were prepared to vote that way. Substitute Collins and Murkowski for Manchin and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema in your prior sentence and your argument becomes BS.
Does your math get them to 60 votes to override the inevitable filibuster? Will Collins and Murkowski commit to that?
The Senate by a mere majority vote for a rule change can remove a matter from the 60 vote filibuster requirement, and both parties have done so; for example, when it comes to voting on judges. Collins and
Murkowski said they were prepared to vote with the Dems to do so.

Collins and Murkowski said they'd override the filibuster for an abortion bill? Source?
DiabloWags
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wifeisafurd said:




Why do continue to be so illiterate on legal matters?
Why do you continue to push a false narrative that wasnt even remotely possible?
Where is your reference for Collins and Murkowski committing to overriding the filibuster on abortion?

Stop conflating this with how they voted when it came to Judge Jackson.





Go!Bears
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wifeisafurd said:

DiabloWags said:

For a guy that goes off on people's literacy, you clearly don't seem to get it on the legal side and are reduced to complaining about things you know not.

Furd's favorite trick when he gets shown up for his (feigned?) ignorance of politics. Let's shift the terrain to something where he can pretend he's an expert and then he will attempt to overwhelm with irrelevant legal nonsense, hoping no one points out the emperor has no clothes.

This has nothing to do with the law. I sometimes wonder if he is actually as obtuse as he seems or if he is just too stubborn to admit he was wrong.

If there are 50 votes to terminate the filibuster, provide a source for both collins and murkowski. If not, admit you are wrong. If you can, I will happily admit I might be wrong - though it is hard to believe much Collins says. I think I would still need to see her actually do it to be convinced.
DiabloWags
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Go!Bears said:

wifeisafurd said:

DiabloWags said:

For a guy that goes off on people's literacy, you clearly don't seem to get it on the legal side and are reduced to complaining about things you know not.

Furd's favorite trick when he gets shown up for his (feigned?) ignorance of politics. Let's shift the terrain to something where he can pretend he's an expert and then he will attempt to overwhelm with irrelevant legal nonsense, hoping no one points out the emperor has no clothes.

This has nothing to do with the law. I sometimes wonder if he is actually as obtuse as he seems or if he is just too stubborn to admit he was wrong.

If there are 50 votes to terminate the filibuster, provide a source for both collins and murkowski. If not, admit you are wrong. If you can, I will happily admit I might be wrong - though it is hard to believe much Collins says. I think I would still need to see her actually do it to be convinced.

I've observed him doing this on multiple occasions.

His 2500 word "essays" on Teri McKeever's employment contract is the poster child for the irrelevant legal nonsense that he spews whenever he's shown his ignorance on a topic. That's his default mode. I think he's just one of these guys that's too stubborn to admit when he is wrong.

Agreed on Collins.
I wouldnt trust her as far as I could throw her.
She was warned by her colleagues and constituents that Kavanaugh's assurance could not be trusted.

In fact, 230 Maine attorney's urged her to reject Trump's nominee because of their certainty that he would use his position on the bench to overturn Roe. - - - Never mind that he rubbed salt in the wound with his concurrence's clear rejection of the legal principle of stare decisis.

She was a willing dupe.
She put her Republician Party affiliation ahead of her long-proclaimed pro-choice position.

Collins probably did more to destroy reprodutcive rights than any single senator.

To argue that Collins would actually override the filibuster on an abortion bill isnt just being terribly naive, it's preposterous.




blungld
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I believe that Collins is on record as opposing override of filibuster for abortion law and she wouldn't vote for legislation to enshrine Roe because of concerns she had for Catholic hospitals. She weasels out of everything to put into law the things she says when politicking. She is not who she says she is.
The Bear will not quilt, the Bear will not dye!
sycasey
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As far as I can tell, Susan Collins' most recent statement on the filibuster is that she will not vote to remove it.

https://www.collins.senate.gov/newsroom/senator-collins-defends-filibuster-urges-colleagues-to-protect-this-critical-check-on-power

Unless there's something else from her I don't think Democrats actually have the votes to codify Roe in the Senate.
blungld
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The states' rights argument is just another false representation by the GOP. They don't want a nation of patchwork laws as if they are so committed to self-determination and the opinions of people in each geography. No. They want footholds in select areas of the country to grow their base and launch political attacks for electoral votes and to satisfy a patriarchal authoritarian white christian nationalism. They like state rights only so far as it gives them somewhere in the country to codify and from which to enforce their agenda. Yeah right, they want to also make sure the people in CA and New England have their voice heard and have their states enshrine the will of their people. It is ONLY about the will of THEIR people. Liars. Hypocrites.
The Bear will not quilt, the Bear will not dye!
DiabloWags
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sycasey said:

wifeisafurd said:

sycasey said:



Does your math get them to 60 votes to override the inevitable filibuster? Will Collins and Murkowski commit to that?
The Senate by a mere majority vote for a rule change can remove a matter from the 60 vote filibuster requirement, and both parties have done so; for example, when it comes to voting on judges. Collins and
Murkowski said they were prepared to vote with the Dems to do so.

Collins and Murkowski said they'd override the filibuster for an abortion bill? Source?

DiabloWags
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Pelosi Calls to Eliminate Filibuster Against 'Extremist' Court (mediaite.com)
sycasey
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sycasey
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Unit2Sucks
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sycasey said:


This is what I've been saying for days. People like tequila4kapp refuse to address the issue other than to say that at some point terminating a pregnancy is "barbarous". Well at what point is forcing birth barbarous?
DiabloWags
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Unit2sucks said:

This is what I've been saying for days. People like tequila4kapp refuse to address the issue other than to say that at some point terminating a pregnancy is "barbarous". Well at what point is forcing birth barbarous?


Its shocking that people continue to ignore that the maternal mortality is going to go through the roof.

AunBear89
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It's all part of their plan. Love the fetus, ignore the child and vilify the mother.
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics." -- (maybe) Benjamin Disraeli, popularized by Mark Twain
sycasey
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Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:


This is what I've been saying for days. People like tequila4kapp refuse to address the issue other than to say that at some point terminating a pregnancy is "barbarous". Well at what point is forcing birth barbarous?

Also, at some point a doctor is going to ignore the law and get prosecuted for it. Maybe the mother too. Won't that be a nice story.
tequila4kapp
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Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:


This is what I've been saying for days. People like tequila4kapp refuse to address the issue other than to say that at some point terminating a pregnancy is "barbarous". Well at what point is forcing birth barbarous?
Women from Ohio will travel to states where they can get abortions. It isn't great but it happens now. At some point the courts and/or the legislative branch will resolve this. Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test. Legislative branches will eventually pass laws that reach a similar point. Things will not be good for all women until then.

To your question - yes it's barbarous to force women to take such pregnancies to term. The women have option that fetuses don't.
sycasey
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sycasey
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tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
BearGoggles
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sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.

sycasey
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BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.



This does not answer my question. I asked why abortion restrictions in certain states would be struck down by the courts, given the recent Dobbs ruling.

I acknowledge that those laws could change thanks to voting and the political process. I don't understand the point about the courts.
dajo9
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By the standards of the stand your ground laws, she could shoot this guy dead. Except we all know those laws don't apply to conservative white men.
Unit2Sucks
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BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.
6 Catholic clerics, none of whom will ever need to consider terminating a pregnancy (and only one of whom has ever been in that position), just decided that their religious law is more important than allowing women to have access to the full set of reproductive healthcare services that modern medicine affords. We are not a Catholic country (~1/5 Americans identify as Catholic), yet more than 3/4 of SCOTUS is Catholic. This was a religious ruling, not one based on the constitution.

As I recall, you may be of the Jewish faith or have identified as Jewish in the past. Many Jewish leaders argue that this opinion permits states to contradict halakha by preventing pregnant Jewish women from exercising their historical right to access termination.

Quote:

In the eyes of many Jewish leaders, anti-abortion laws are particularly distressing because they contradict Jewish halakha the laws drawn from the Torah, the Mishnah and the Talmud, the most sacred and authoritative texts in the tradition according to Rabbi Ed Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom synagogue in Los Angeles.

Feinstein cited several passages from Jewish scripture that have grounded the religion's position on reproductive rights in the modern era, such as a line from the Judaic oral tradition stating that the life of a "woman who is having difficulty in giving birth" must "take precedence."

He said the reasoning undergirding anti-abortion legislation in some conservative-skewing states typically comes out of conservative Christian theology ignoring the Jewish principle that a fetus in the womb has "potential" but not the status of full personhood.

"The idea that life begins at conception is a philosophical idea, and the source of that idea is a religious source: Catholic and evangelical interpretation of scripture," Feinstein said. "But our tradition has a different idea, that full life begins at birth, and there is a different moral standard.

You can pretend that this historical practice is "radical" and that politicians are "extreme" on both sides, but the reality is that this opinion cherry-picked history and practices that the six deciding clerics favor for themselves. As is consistent with Jewish practices, I support a woman's right to choose. I don't believe any limits need to be placed on it by government theocrats based on a religious tradition that doesn't apply to all women. People who don't believe abortion is consistent with their religious practices are free to not terminate their own pregnancies. They don't have the right to tell other people what to do.

The extreme view here is applying Catholic norms (which not all Catholics choose to abide by) to American women based on the whims of the gerrymandered state legislature for the state they happen to live in.
dajo9
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Unit2Sucks said:

BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.
6 Catholic clerics, none of whom will ever need to consider terminating a pregnancy (and only one of whom has ever been in that position), just decided that their religious law is more important than allowing women to have access to the full set of reproductive healthcare services that modern medicine affords. We are not a Catholic country (~1/5 Americans identify as Catholic), yet more than 3/4 of SCOTUS is Catholic. This was a religious ruling, not one based on the constitution.

As I recall, you may be of the Jewish faith or have identified as Jewish in the past. Many Jewish leaders argue that this opinion permits states to contradict halakha by preventing pregnant Jewish women from exercising their historical right to access termination.

Quote:

In the eyes of many Jewish leaders, anti-abortion laws are particularly distressing because they contradict Jewish halakha the laws drawn from the Torah, the Mishnah and the Talmud, the most sacred and authoritative texts in the tradition according to Rabbi Ed Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom synagogue in Los Angeles.

Feinstein cited several passages from Jewish scripture that have grounded the religion's position on reproductive rights in the modern era, such as a line from the Judaic oral tradition stating that the life of a "woman who is having difficulty in giving birth" must "take precedence."

He said the reasoning undergirding anti-abortion legislation in some conservative-skewing states typically comes out of conservative Christian theology ignoring the Jewish principle that a fetus in the womb has "potential" but not the status of full personhood.

"The idea that life begins at conception is a philosophical idea, and the source of that idea is a religious source: Catholic and evangelical interpretation of scripture," Feinstein said. "But our tradition has a different idea, that full life begins at birth, and there is a different moral standard.

You can pretend that this historical practice is "radical" and that politicians are "extreme" on both sides, but the reality is that this opinion cherry-picked history and practices that the six deciding clerics favor for themselves. As is consistent with Jewish practices, I support a woman's right to choose. I don't believe any limits need to be placed on it by government theocrats based on a religious tradition that doesn't apply to all women. People who don't believe abortion is consistent with their religious practices are free to not terminate their own pregnancies. They don't have the right to tell other people what to do.

The extreme view here is applying Catholic norms (which not all Catholics choose to abide by) to American women based on the whims of the gerrymandered state legislature for the state they happen to live in.


I wouldn't be so sure that Catholic clerics would never have need for an abortion. When my mother's cousin was raped by a priest (no punishment) she was pre-pubescent. But I don't think Catholic priests have only raped the pre-pubescent.
Unit2Sucks
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dajo9 said:

Unit2Sucks said:

BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.
6 Catholic clerics, none of whom will ever need to consider terminating a pregnancy (and only one of whom has ever been in that position), just decided that their religious law is more important than allowing women to have access to the full set of reproductive healthcare services that modern medicine affords. We are not a Catholic country (~1/5 Americans identify as Catholic), yet more than 3/4 of SCOTUS is Catholic. This was a religious ruling, not one based on the constitution.

As I recall, you may be of the Jewish faith or have identified as Jewish in the past. Many Jewish leaders argue that this opinion permits states to contradict halakha by preventing pregnant Jewish women from exercising their historical right to access termination.

Quote:

In the eyes of many Jewish leaders, anti-abortion laws are particularly distressing because they contradict Jewish halakha the laws drawn from the Torah, the Mishnah and the Talmud, the most sacred and authoritative texts in the tradition according to Rabbi Ed Feinstein of Valley Beth Shalom synagogue in Los Angeles.

Feinstein cited several passages from Jewish scripture that have grounded the religion's position on reproductive rights in the modern era, such as a line from the Judaic oral tradition stating that the life of a "woman who is having difficulty in giving birth" must "take precedence."

He said the reasoning undergirding anti-abortion legislation in some conservative-skewing states typically comes out of conservative Christian theology ignoring the Jewish principle that a fetus in the womb has "potential" but not the status of full personhood.

"The idea that life begins at conception is a philosophical idea, and the source of that idea is a religious source: Catholic and evangelical interpretation of scripture," Feinstein said. "But our tradition has a different idea, that full life begins at birth, and there is a different moral standard.

You can pretend that this historical practice is "radical" and that politicians are "extreme" on both sides, but the reality is that this opinion cherry-picked history and practices that the six deciding clerics favor for themselves. As is consistent with Jewish practices, I support a woman's right to choose. I don't believe any limits need to be placed on it by government theocrats based on a religious tradition that doesn't apply to all women. People who don't believe abortion is consistent with their religious practices are free to not terminate their own pregnancies. They don't have the right to tell other people what to do.

The extreme view here is applying Catholic norms (which not all Catholics choose to abide by) to American women based on the whims of the gerrymandered state legislature for the state they happen to live in.


I wouldn't be so sure that Catholic clerics would never have need for an abortion. When my mother's cousin was raped by a priest (no punishment) she was pre-pubescent. But I don't think Catholic priests have only raped the pre-pubescent.
The only woman in the majority is 50 years old. She is unlikely to ever become pregnant and have to face the difficult decision of whether to terminate a pregnancy. The five men averaging 65 years old may have been involved in a partner's decision decades ago (or more recently with a mistress, I suppose) but this isn't an acute issue for them.
tequila4kapp
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sycasey said:

BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.



This does not answer my question. I asked why abortion restrictions in certain states would be struck down by the courts, given the recent Dobbs ruling.

I acknowledge that those laws could change thanks to voting and the political process. I don't understand the point about the courts.
The Dobbs decision basically said the law as enunciated by Roe and Casey was wrong, that they misinterpreted the Constitution and applied the wrong legal basis for assessing abortion restrictions. The only abortion restriction before them was Mississippi's 15 week rule. They announced the new legal standard/test (Rational Basis), applied it to the 15 week rule and decided it was allowed.

All other state rules - existing and future - have to be assessed against the Rational Basis test themselves. That standard is very low so most restrictions will now be allowed that previously would have been disallowed. The standard necessarily involves judgement about what is Rational. Eventually one district will rule differently on a set of restrictions from another and eventually SCOTUS will take that case. IMO this is a mess and Robert's dissent looks better and better by the day.

The cleanest immediate solution is for Congressional Dem's to get their crap together, craft a moderate bill that deals with the worst of the worst, pick off a couple of Republican Senators (and Manchin) and get it passed as a federal abortion standard. Others have alluded to it in the thread already but that gets us in the space of how much D's really want to solve the problem vs have the issue for November, filibusters, the inability of D leadership to hold its caucus together, etc. I suspect that if there is a Red wave on Nov 6 D's will mysteriously find a way to pass an abortion bill well in advance of R's taking over in January.
DiabloWags
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Unit2Sucks said:



The only woman in the majority is 50 years old. She is unlikely to ever become pregnant and have to face the difficult decision of whether to terminate a pregnancy. The five men averaging 65 years old may have been involved in a partner's decision decades ago (or more recently with a mistress, I suppose) but this isn't an acute issue for them.

This ^^^ pretty much succinctly summarizes why this decision is so extremely pathetic.

The majority opinion is such an exercise of bad-faith jurisprudence, that there's really no reason to try and engage it on the merits. The dissenting opinion pretty much filet Alito's cherry-picked originalism. This is the beginning of a new puritanism in this country, ushered in by the Alito Court. If we dont expand the Court, these conservative justices will make the First Amendment as weaponized as the Second.

In laymen's terms, the Court is outcome determinative.
The law is simply a tool to manipulate to get to a desired outcome.



Unit2Sucks
How long do you want to ignore this user?
tequila4kapp said:

sycasey said:

BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.



This does not answer my question. I asked why abortion restrictions in certain states would be struck down by the courts, given the recent Dobbs ruling.

I acknowledge that those laws could change thanks to voting and the political process. I don't understand the point about the courts.
The Dobbs decision basically said the law as enunciated by Roe and Casey was wrong, that they misinterpreted the Constitution and applied the wrong legal basis for assessing abortion restrictions. The only abortion restriction before the was Mississippi's 15 week rule. They announced the new standard/test (Rational Basis), applied it to the 15 week rule and decided it was allowed. All other state rules - existing and future - have to be assessed on the RB test themselves. IMO this is a mess and Robert's dissent looks better and better by the day.
Roberts dissent is garbage. He says the old test is wrong because viability isn't the real issue.

Quote:

Today, the Court nonetheless rules for Mississippi by do-
ing just that. I would take a more measured course. I agree
with the Court that the viability line established by Roe and
Casey should be discarded under a straightforward stare de-
cisis analysis. That line never made any sense. Our abor-
tion precedents describe the right at issue as a woman's
right to choose to terminate her pregnancy. That right
should therefore extend far enough to ensure a reasonable
opportunity to choose, but need not extend any further
certainly not all the way to viability. Mississippi's law al-
lows a woman three months to obtain an abortion, well be-
yond the point at which it is considered "late" to discover a
pregnancy. See A. Ayoola, Late Recognition of Unintended
Pregnancies, 32 Pub. Health Nursing 462 (2015) (preg-
nancy is discoverable and ordinarily discovered by six
weeks of gestation). I see no sound basis for questioning
the adequacy of that opportunity.
The reason I think it's garbage is that in practice women need time not just to discover pregnancy but to take action. Further, the deeper in pregnancy you go, the more you find out about the fetus, including fatal and non-fatal anomalies.

Beyond that, Mississippi literally has one abortion provider - the plaintiff in this case. 91% of the 600k women of reproductive age in MS live in counties without abortion providers.

I could have understood if this case was remanded with a multi-prong test to determine whether women in MS truly have reasonable access to reproductive care, including some form of termination, but rather than do that the court either lied or ignored what's really happening on the ground in MS. This is also true in many other states.

This is the sort of outcome you get when you have clerics rendering opinions, not prudent jurists interpreting the constitution.
sycasey
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tequila4kapp said:

All other state rules - existing and future - have to be assessed against the Rational Basis test themselves. That standard is very low so most restrictions will now be allowed that previously would have been disallowed. The standard necessarily involves judgement about what is Rational. Eventually one district will rule differently on a set of restrictions from another and eventually SCOTUS will take that case. IMO this is a mess and Robert's dissent looks better and better by the day.
Okay, I can see how that might work. And like you I don't understand why they chose to make it so messy, when Roberts' "clean" option was right there on the table.

That leads me to the conclusion that they're making a political statement more than laying out an actual workable legal standard. That also does not make me confident that they'll adhere to any kind of consistent standard for the cases that come later.
Unit2Sucks
How long do you want to ignore this user?
sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

All other state rules - existing and future - have to be assessed against the Rational Basis test themselves. That standard is very low so most restrictions will now be allowed that previously would have been disallowed. The standard necessarily involves judgement about what is Rational. Eventually one district will rule differently on a set of restrictions from another and eventually SCOTUS will take that case. IMO this is a mess and Robert's dissent looks better and better by the day.
Okay, I can see how that might work. And like you I don't understand why they chose to make it so messy, when Roberts' "clean" option was right there on the table.

That leads me to the conclusion that they're making a political statement more than laying out an actual workable legal standard. That also does not make me confident that they'll adhere to any kind of consistent standard for the cases that come later.
The only way "cases come later" is if a court of appeals blocks a law. Given how many conservative judges there are throughout the circuits where the forced birthers control legislation, it may be a while. I think the court was purposefully vague to make it as hard as possible for circuit courts to block overly restrictive laws.

I won't be surprised if we don't see another meaningful SCOTUS opinion on abortion for many years.
tequila4kapp
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Unit2Sucks said:

tequila4kapp said:

sycasey said:

BearGoggles said:

sycasey said:

tequila4kapp said:

Courts will hear cases and eventually rule that restrictions like this or which restrict abortions before a woman can know she's pregnant, have time to process / make a decision and get scheduled all fail the Rational Basis test.

Curious: if the Supreme Court intended this to be the outcome, why didn't they simply rule that way? They could have carved out exceptions like this from the jump. They didn't. Why then would they uphold any more challenges to state laws?
Because that issue was not before the supreme court and may not ever be now that Roe is gone.

Those issues will be addressed in the state legislatures and state courts, including, any claims that a women's rights under state or federal laws (and state constitutions) are violated. If there are federal claims - which will be harder if not impossible - the rational basis test will apply.

The link below goes state by state in discussing current and in some cases pending abortion laws.

https://reason.com/2022/06/24/here-is-a-state-by-state-rundown-of-what-will-happen-now-that-scotus-has-freed-lawmakers-to-restrict-abortion/?itm_source=parsely-api

I didn't check every single state with restrictive laws. But based on a spot check, it appears that even the most restrictive laws allow for abortion for a mother's health (thought not always rape/incest) and in some cases limited other circumstances.

Beyond that, I think this article is a very good discussion.

https://jonathanturley.org/2022/06/27/what-to-expect-in-a-post-roe-world/

Here is a key part:

"While some Democrats are voicing absolute views of abortion, and some Republicans are calling for total bans, most Americans hold a more nuanced view.

In 1975, polling showed 54 percent supported abortion under some circumstances, with 21 percent saying it should be entirely legal; 22 percent said it should be illegal.

According to recent polling by the Pew Research Center, only 8 percent of adults say abortion should be illegal without exception, while just 19 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases, without exception. Yet, polls also show that 65 percent of Americans would make most abortions illegal in the second trimester, and 80 percent would make most abortions illegal in the third trimester.

These polls suggest that the majority of Americans will continue to live in states protecting abortion while citizens would support limits like the one in Mississippi. In Virginia, Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) announced an effort to limit abortions to Mississippi's 15-week standard but expressed a willingness to compromise on that cutoff date. In other words, there may be room for compromise as states work out their own approaches to abortion.

Of course, none of the political or legal realities will likely penetrate the rage and rhetoric following the decision."

______________

What does that tell me? That politicians on both sides are wildly out of step with main stream voters. Many red states are too restrictive on abortion; and many blue states are far too permissive (e.g., abortion through the 9th month). As others have posted, we got to that sad place precisely because, after Roe, the political system awarded the most extreme on each side. Roe mostly insulate them from the practical consequences of their extreme positions. Not anymore, though it will take time.
This does not answer my question. I asked why abortion restrictions in certain states would be struck down by the courts, given the recent Dobbs ruling.

I acknowledge that those laws could change thanks to voting and the political process. I don't understand the point about the courts.
The Dobbs decision basically said the law as enunciated by Roe and Casey was wrong, that they misinterpreted the Constitution and applied the wrong legal basis for assessing abortion restrictions. The only abortion restriction before the was Mississippi's 15 week rule. They announced the new standard/test (Rational Basis), applied it to the 15 week rule and decided it was allowed. All other state rules - existing and future - have to be assessed on the RB test themselves. IMO this is a mess and Robert's dissent looks better and better by the day.
Roberts dissent is garbage. He says the old test is wrong because viability isn't the real issue.

Quote:

Today, the Court nonetheless rules for Mississippi by do-
ing just that. I would take a more measured course. I agree
with the Court that the viability line established by Roe and
Casey should be discarded under a straightforward stare de-
cisis analysis. That line never made any sense. Our abor-
tion precedents describe the right at issue as a woman's
right to choose to terminate her pregnancy. That right
should therefore extend far enough to ensure a reasonable
opportunity to choose, but need not extend any further
certainly not all the way to viability. Mississippi's law al-
lows a woman three months to obtain an abortion, well be-
yond the point at which it is considered "late" to discover a
pregnancy. See A. Ayoola, Late Recognition of Unintended
Pregnancies, 32 Pub. Health Nursing 462 (2015) (preg-
nancy is discoverable and ordinarily discovered by six
weeks of gestation). I see no sound basis for questioning
the adequacy of that opportunity.
The reason I think it's garbage is that in practice women need time not just to discover pregnancy but to take action. Further, the deeper in pregnancy you go, the more you find out about the fetus, including fatal and non-fatal anomalies.

Beyond that, Mississippi literally has one abortion provider - the plaintiff in this case. 91% of the 600k women of reproductive age in MS live in counties without abortion providers.

I could have understood if this case was remanded with a multi-prong test to determine whether women in MS truly have reasonable access to reproductive care, including some form of termination, but rather than do that the court either lied or ignored what's really happening on the ground in MS. This is also true in many other states.

This is the sort of outcome you get when you have clerics rendering opinions, not prudent jurists interpreting the constitution.
Roberts probably cared that Roe was wrong but cared more about SCOTUS.

I do expect cases to come soon that call into question the very point you make. For example, how can Tx's 6 week (?) restriction pass even the RB test? A right that can't be exercised because a women can't yet know she's pregnant, can't access the healthcare in time (ie X number of providers), etc isn't a right at all and virtually by definition cannot be Rational. I appreciate skeptics see it differently but I have some faith it will eventually land somewhere much different than it seems today, though still not where it was pre-Dobbs
 
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