The Pennsylvania Supreme Court just issued a crushing rebuttal of Justice Alito
On Monday, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordered a lower court to reconsider a challenge to the states decades-old ban on using Medicaid funds for abortions, except in cases of rape or incest. While the case goes back down to the trial court for now, the writing is on the wall for what the lower court must do, and the state Supreme Courts reasoning has far wider implications. The majority opinion not only thoroughly rebutted the U.S. Supreme Courts error-filled Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, it signaled a possible new path for reasserting abortion rights.
In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that the right to an abortion was protected by the 14th Amendments due process clause, which the seven-justice majority read to include the right to privacy, which itself includes personal autonomy and the right to an abortion. But there was a road not taken by the court, perhaps a more obvious route to protecting abortion rights. Instead of finding that the right to an abortion is a liberty entitled to constitutional protection, the court could have concluded that abortion restrictions are tantamount to discrimination on the basis of sex. In this way, many restrictions on abortions would still violate the U.S. Constitution, but that violation would be based upon the equal protection clause instead of the due process clause.
As I previously wrote, one case where the Supreme Court could have chosen this path involved an Air Force servicewoman represented by an attorney named Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The future justice believed that shielding abortion under the equal protection clause was the better path for protecting abortion rights. But though that case was initially accepted by the Supreme Court, the justices never heard arguments, and they ended up eschewing the equality theory in favor of the freedom theory of abortion rights. Until, of course, they didnt.
Enter the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In a 3-2 vote, the court overturned a 1985 decision upholding the law and set forth a new standard for analyzing the law. The legal issue, according to a majority of the court, is whether the law discriminates on the basis of sex and violates the states equal rights amendment. The court appeared to dance with the idea that the right of an abortion is protected by the states equal protection clause, but paused before making that conclusion.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/the-pennsylvania-supreme-court-just-issued-a-crushing-rebuttal-of-justice-alito/ar-BB1hKq5I
FakeNoose
(32,645 posts)Rhiannon12866
(205,550 posts)SouthBayDem
(32,034 posts)In another era, this article would've been hosted on "www.msnbc.msn.com", because Microsoft used to own MSNBC until 2012.
snot
(10,530 posts)that forcing a woman against her will to bear a pregnancy to term isn't a form of involuntary servitude, although I realize there are special sensitivities around the subject of slavery.
I'd be interested in any counter-arguments.