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270 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
SHOULD CONSERVATIVES GIVE UP ON SUPREME COURT?-HUMAN EVENTS 7/11/92
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In the wake of the Supreme Court's June 29 decision in which a
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plurality of two justices appointed by Ronald Reagan and a third
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named by George bush went out of their way t reaffirm the court's
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1973 invention in Roe v. Wade of a purported constitutional right
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to have abortions, stunned conservatives were asking themselves
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what more, if anything, can be done to bring a halt to the
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arbitrary - and blatantly unconstitutional-usurpation of power by
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judges in this country.
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There have been five vacancies on the nine-member court since
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1981. On each and every one of those occasions liberals accused
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the White House of administering ideological "litmus" tests on a
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variety of political issues to potential nominees.
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And just as frequently Administration spokesmen denied the
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imposition of such tests, insisting that, in choosing justices,
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Presidents Reagan and Bush had only one overriding objective: that
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those selected for the court would honor their solemn obligation as
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judges - indispensable to our system of separation of powers - to
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interpret the Constitution, not impose their own personal whims
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about what they would like it to say.
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Yet in their jointly written plurality opinion in Planned
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Parenthood v. Casey, Reagan-appointed Justices Sandra Day O'Connor
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and Anthony Kennedy, together with Justice David Souter, a Bush
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appointee, committed the one transgression that the chief
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executives to whom they owe their high positions had taken pains to
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avoid - judicial activism.
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At issue in the case was the constitutional validity of a
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Pennsylvania statute placing several restrictions on the process of
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obtaining an abortion in that state, and many had thought that the
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High Court might use the case to reverse the controversial holding
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in Roe that purported to discern a constitutionally protected
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"right" to an abortion. The Bush Administration, in its amicus
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brief, had sought such a reversal.
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In the end the court, with the concurrence of O'Connor,
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Kennedy and Souter, upheld most, though not all, of the limitations
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enacted by Pennsylvania. Yet, far from overturning Roe, the three
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Reagan-bush appointees went out of their way to reaffirm what they
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termed Roe's "central holding": that the availability of abortion
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prior to "viability" of the fetus - i.e., the point when the unborn
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child is capable of living outside the mother's womb-is a right
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grounded in the Constitution.
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In conjunction with the even stronger pro-abortion position of
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the court's long-time zealots for abortion-on-demand - Justices
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Harry Blackmun, who wrote the 1973 opinion in Roe, and John Paul
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Stevens - the effect of the plurality opinion was to reaffirm the
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notion of a constitutional "right" to an abortion, despite the
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absence of any credible evidence for such a finding.
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As Justice Antonin Scalia noted in a scathing dissenting
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opinion that was joined by Chief Justice William Rehnquist, Justice
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Byron White, and the most recent addition to the court, Clarence
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Thomas, it is obvious that abortion is not a constitutionally
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protected "liberty" for the same reason that it's obvious "that
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bigamy is not constitutionally protected - because of two simple
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facts: (1) the Constitution says absolutely nothing about it, and
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(2) the longstanding traditions of American society have permitted
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it to be legally proscribed."
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Indeed, as Chief Justice William Rehnquist explained, the
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historical traditions of the American people in no way support the
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view that the right to terminate one's pregnancy is "fundamental."
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On the contrary, wrote Rehnquist, "The common law which we
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inherited from England made abortion after 'quickening' an offense.
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"At the time of the adoption of the 14th Amendment [cited by
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O'Connor-Kennedy-Souter as the locus of the constitutional abortion
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"right"], statutory prohibitions or restrictions on abortion were
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commonplace; in 1868, at least 28 of the then 37 states and eight
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territories had statutes banning or limiting abortion. by the turn
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of the century virtually every state had a law prohibiting or
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restricting abortion on its books."
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By the middle of the current century, the chief justice
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continued, "a liberalization trend had set in. But 21 of the
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restrictive abortion laws in effect in 1868 were still in effect in
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1973 when Roe was decided, and an overwhelming majority of the
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states prohibited abortion unless necessary to preserve the life or
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health of the mother.
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"On this record, it can scarcely be said that any deeply
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rooted tradition of relatively unrestricted abortion in our history
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supported the classification of the right to abortion as
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'fundamental' under the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment."
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As in Roe, then, the "right" to abortion elaborated in Planned
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Parenthood v. Casey had nothing to do with the Constitution. It
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was a judge-made law, pure and simple. Illegitimate in any case,
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a judicial power grab of this kind is particularly disgraceful
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coming from justices heretofore known as judicial conservatives or
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moderates.
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Most shocking about this court decision was the role of
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Justice Kennedy. When nominated by President Reagan in 1987,
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following the defeat of the Robert Bork nomination, then-Judge
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Kennedy of the Appeals Court for the 9th Circuit brought with him
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a record of well-enunciated respect for judicial restraint.
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As a justice of the High Court, Kennedy not only continued to
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burnish that record in general, but, on the specific issue of
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abortion, he joined just three years ago in a plurality opinion in
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Webster v. Reproductive Health Services that would have directly
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overturned Roe, saying that there was no more right to terminate a
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pregnancy than to engage in any other action not specifically
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protected by the Constitution.
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Whether legally or philosophically, there is no way to square
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the position taken by Kennedy last week with his position in
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Webster. The judicial unrestraint in Casey represents a shift so
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abrupt that it is hard to view it as less than a betrayal of
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principle.
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Though O'Connor had always been regarded as somewhat less
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faithful to judicial conservatism than Kennedy, her position in
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Casey also represented a reversal of some of her past
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pronouncements on abortion and a pronounced step toward unabashed
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judicial activism.
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As the New York Times reported last week, "In her early
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opinions, Justice O'Connor proposed replacing Roe v. Wade with an
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'undue burden' test that would have allowed more restrictions than
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the test she, Justice Kennedy and Justice Souter adopted today.
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"Because she had initially referred to the state's interest in
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the life of the fetus as 'compelling, it had not been at all clear
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whether her original 'undue burden' test would find it
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unconstitutional for a state to ban abortion"- something a state
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explicitly cannot do under the opinion co-authored by O'Connor in
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Casey.
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Souter, of course, was a pig in a poke from the outset, having
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brought to his confirmation hearings virtually no "paper trail" and
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little more than an endorsement by the moderate, pro-abortion Sen.
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Warren Rudman (R.-N.H.). But Souter's current disposition, along
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with that of O'Connor and Kennedy, seems all too clear.
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Together, the three justices have sent a loud signal that, in
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cooperation with the court's liberals, Blackmun and Stevens, they
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intend to forge a new direction for the court that is far less
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judicially conservative than had been expected.
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For those who were paying attention, a warning shot came even
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before Casey when, by the same 5-to-4 majority, the court on June
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24 banned the use of prayers at public-school graduation
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ceremonies- a practice that has been as ubiquitous a part of
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American tradition since the time of the Founding Fathers as legal
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abortion conspicuously has not been.
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As if to turn the knife after first sticking it into those who
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revere the tradition of judicial restraint, the three justices not
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only jointly authored the plurality opinion, which is unusual, but
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the read their decision from the bench for dramatic effect.
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Their clear goal was to emphasize that, no matter that
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millions of Americans resent the hijacking of the Constitution
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represented by Roe, the controversial decision is still going to
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be, for the foreseeable future, the unrepealable law of the land.
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It was a thoroughly disgusting performance. As both Chief
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Justice Rehnquist and Justice Scalia observed, Justices O'Connor,
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Kennedy, and Souter could not even bring themselves "to say that
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Roe was correct as an original matter." Instead, they said that
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what was important "is not the soundness of Roe's resolution of the
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issue, but the precedential force that must be accorded to its
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holding."
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So instead of arguing that Roe was correctly decided, the
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unholy trio devoted many pages to a discussion of stare decisis,
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the legal doctrine that states that, when possible, the court
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should "abide by, or adhere to, decided cases."
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Yet, noted Rehnquist and Scalia, the plurality decision's
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discussion of stare decisis was actually bogus since Kennedy et al.
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did not actually uphold Roe and related cases in their original
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form but imposed their own new version of what Roe should mean.
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While acknowledging that they may not have supported Roe had
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they been on the court in 1973, the three justices argued that
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people have come to rely on the Roe precedent, that "people have
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organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their
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views of themselves and their places in society" based on the
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availability of abortion, and that it would be disruptive to
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reverse the decision now, even if it was wrongly decided in the
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first place.
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The plurality gave as still another reason for not overturning
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Roe that to "overrule under fire... would subvert the court's
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legitimacy." In short, they did not want to be seen as bowing to
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pressure from right-to-life activists who have demonstrated against
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a decision that they are convinced was wrongly decided.
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But this was silly on its face. For one thing, the justices
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do not seem to mind that Roe v. Wade might be seen as having
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catered to the demands of those who favor abortion-on-demand. The
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Chief Justice pointed to the obvious when he noted that the court
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has been subjected to "political pressure" from both sides of the
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abortion issue.
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Moreover, as Justice Scalia wrote, for a court majority that
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says it can make up the law as it goes along, "unrestrained by
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meaningful text or tradition," to then state that the court "must
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adhere to a decision for as long as the decision faces 'great
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opposition' and the court is 'under fire' acquires a character of
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almost czarist arrogance.
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"We are offended by these marchers who descend upon us, every
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year on the anniversary of Roe to protest our saying that the
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Constitution requires what our society has never thought the
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Constitution requires. These people...must be taught a lesson. We
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have no Cossacks, but at least we can stubbornly refuse to abandon
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an erroneous opinion that we might otherwise change-to show how
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little they intimidate us."
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As still another excuse for refusing to overturn Roe whether
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or not it was correctly decided initially, the three justices wrote
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that, when the court has decided a case "in such a way as to
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resolve the sort of intensely divisive controversy reflected in
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Roe," the court should stand its ground and tell both sides to
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acquiesce in the court's decision.
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But this description of what the court had achieved in handing
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down Roe suggests that the three justices have lost their grip on
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social reality. Far from "resolving" a controversy, the court's
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Roe edict took what was a relatively mild dispute in some of the
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states and fanned it to a new level of intensity nationwide.
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In words that remind us of the value of our heritage of
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federalism and states' rights, Scalia noted:
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"Not only did Roe not, as the court suggests, resolve the
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deeply divisive issue of abortion; it did more than anything else
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to nourish it, by elevating it to the national level where it is
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infinitely more difficult to resolve. National politics were not
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plagued by abortion protests, national abortion lobbying, or
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abortion marches on Congress, before Roe v. Wade was decided.
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"Profound disagreement existed among our citizens over the
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issue-as it does over other issues, such as the death penalty-but
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that disagreement was being worked out at the state level. As with
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many other issues, the division of sentiment within each state was
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not as closely balanced as it was among the population of the
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nation as a whole, meaning not only that more people would be
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satisfied with the results of state-by-state resolution, but also
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that those results would be more stable. Pre-Roe, moreover,
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political compromise was not possible."
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But, said Scalia, "Roe's mandate for abortion-on-demand
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destroyed the compromises of the past, rendered compromise
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impossible for the future, and required the entire issue to be
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resolved uniformly, at the national level. At the same time, Roe
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created a vast new class of abortion consumers and abortion
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proponents by eliminating the moral opprobrium that had attached to
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the act...
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"Many favor all of those developments," said Scalia, "and it
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is not for me to say that they are wrong. But to portray Roe as
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the statesmanlike 'settlement' of a divisive issue, a
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jurisprudential Peace of Westphalia that is worth preserving, is
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nothing less than Orwellian."
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That justices appointed by Reagan and Bush have turned their
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back on restraint and apparently set the stage for the court to
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undertake a new round of the judicial activism that conservatives
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had thought a thing of the past is a profound disappointment. Have
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the Supreme Court appointments of Reagan and Bush been for naught?
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many wonder.
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Such frustration is understandable, but there have been some
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gains. Thus, even while maintaining that there is a constitutional
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right to abortion, last week's court decision allowed some state
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limits on abortion that had not been allowed before. Most
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importantly, the Casey decision did newly specify that states can
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ban abortion except to save the life or health of the mother once
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an unborn child has reached "viability," which had not been allowed
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under some past court rulings.
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The court also allowed Pennsylvania to require parental
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notification before a minor can get an abortion and upheld the
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state requirement of a 24-hour waiting period after giving informed
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consent to a physician. (On the other hand, the court disallowed
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a provision requiring wives to inform their husbands before
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aborting a baby that was also his child.)
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Probably the best grounds for hope at this stage, however, is
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that, for all of the disappointment of last week's decision, the
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court fell only one vote short of overturning Roe ad of upholding
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school prayer, which means that further changes in the composition
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of the court may yet make a reversal possible. It should be
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remembered, moreover, that other Reagan and Bush nominees have not
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disappointed but, indeed, form the hard core of the court's current
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conservative bloc.
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President Bush, who is in trouble with conservative groups,
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may be able to regain some conservative support by pledging, if
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reelected, to redouble his commitment to choosing only judges who
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will interpret and not make the law. Last week's betrayal shows
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how difficult such a quest is, but it is clearly not impossible.
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As constitutional scholar Bruce Fein points out, the key
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lesson that should come out of last week's decision is that, in
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nominating new judges, it is not enough to select candidates who
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have judicially conservative instincts; they must have judicially
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conservative convictions.
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