Students from Liberty University pray in front of the U.S. Supreme Court during oral arguments in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization abortion case on Dec. 1, 2021. / Katie Yoder/CNA
Washington D.C., Dec 1, 2021 / 15:40 pm (CNA).
The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments about the constitutionality of Mississippi’s 15-week state abortion ban Wednesday, a high-stakes test of the settledness of legalized abortion in a deeply unsettled nation still sharply divided over the right to life.
The case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, is viewed by many Catholic leaders and pro-life groups as the best chance yet to overturn the court’s landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which has barred restrictive early-term abortion laws like Mississippi’s for the past 48 years.
Over that time, some 62 million abortions have taken place in the United States, statistics show, a grim toll the Catholic Church sees as both a grave evil and a catastrophic political failure.
Conversely, a decision that strikes down Mississippi’s 2018 law, called the Gestational Age Act, which prohibits abortions after the 15th week of gestation, would represent a devastating setback for the pro-life movement. For many years it has pinned its hopes of overturning Roe on the goal of securing a supermajority of conservative justices on the nation’s highest court, as is the case now.
With thousands of people keeping a vocal but peaceful vigil outside the Supreme Court on a bright, brisk morning in Washington, D.C., the nine justices took up the intensely anticipated case in a proceeding that lasted nearly two hours.
Among the demonstrators were four women shown in a viral video posted online swallowing pills behind a large sign that reads, “WE ARE TAKING ABORTION PILLS FOREVER,” a reference to the prescription drugs mifepristone and misoprostol that when used in combination will induce a miscarriage.
Mississippi is asking the court to do more than simply uphold the state’s abortion law; it wants the court to overturn both Roe and a later ruling that affirmed it nearly 20 years later, the 1992 case Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
Both Roe and Casey “have no basis in the Constitution,” Scott G. Stewart, the state’s solicitor general, said in his opening argument.
“They have no home in our history or traditions. They’ve damaged the democratic process. They poison the law. They’ve choked off compromise for 50 years,” he said.
In Roe, the court ruled that states could not ban abortion before viability, which the court determined to be 24 to 28 weeks into pregnancy. Casey, viewed as the “Dobbs” of its day, found that while states could regulate pre-viability abortions, they could not enforce an “undue burden.” The Casey court defined that term to mean “a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.”
Stewart said the two cases have “kept this court at the center of a political battle that it can never resolve.”
“Nowhere else does this court recognize a right to end a human life,” he said.
A question of ‘settled’ law
Legal scholars see the court’s reluctance to overturn past rulings, even highly controversial ones, as Mississippi’s greatest hurdle in Dobbs.
As anticipated, that legal principle, known as stare decisis, loomed large Wednesday, dominating the litigants’ oral arguments and the justices’ questions. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the newest addition to the court’s 6-3 conservative majority, said that stare decisis is “obviously the core of this case.”
The term comes from the Latin phrase, Stare decisis at non quieta movere, which means “to stand by things decided and not disturb settled points.”
Stewart, the Mississippi solicitor general, argued that legalized abortion remains an unsettled debate in the United States nearly a half-century after Roe. He argued that the issue should be left to democratically elected state legislatures, not the courts.
“The Constitution places its trust in the people. On hard issue after hard issue, the people make this country work,” he said.
“Abortion is a hard issue. It demands the best from all of us, not a judgment by just a few of us when an issue affects everyone. And when the Constitution does not take sides on it, it belongs to the people.”
In its court brief, Mississippi cites stare decisis as the reason Roe and Casey should be overturned.
“Roe and Casey are egregiously wrong. The conclusion that abortion is a constitutional right has no basis in text, structure, history, or tradition,” the brief states. Roe itself broke from precedent because it invoked “a general ‘right to privacy’ unmoored from the Constitution,” the state argues.
“Abortion is fundamentally different from any right this Court has ever endorsed. No other right involves, as abortion does, ‘the purposeful termination of a potential life,’” the brief states. “Roe broke from prior cases, Casey failed to rehabilitate it, and both recognize a right that has no basis in the Constitution.”
But Julie Rikelman, litigation director of the Center for Reproductive Rights, sharply disagreed.
“Casey and Roe were correct,” Rikelman, who represented Jackson Women’s Health, Mississippi’s last remaining abortion provider, told the justices.
She added that there is an “an especially high bar here” as the Supreme Court rejected “every possible reason” for overturning Roe when it decided Casey nearly 30 years ago.
“Mississippi’s ban on abortion two months before viability is flatly unconstitutional under decades of precedent. Mississippi asks for the court to dismantle this precedent and allow states to force women to remain pregnant and give birth against their will,” she said.
“Two generations have now relied on this right,” Rikelman continued. “And one out of every four women makes the decision to end a pregnancy.”
A third attorney arguing before the court Wednesday, U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar, representing the Biden administration in opposition to Mississippi’s abortion law, couched the Dobbs case in similar terms. She said overturning Roe and Casey would be “an unprecedented contraction of individual rights and a stark departure from principles of stare decisis.”
Credibility concerns
Liberal justices Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan argued that overturning Roe and Casey would undermine the court’s integrity by signaling that its decisions were influenced by political pressure.
“Will this institution survive the stench that this creates in the public perception that the constitution and its reading are just political acts?” Sotomayor said. “I don’t see how it is possible.”
Conservative Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, however, pushed back against that reasoning. He noted that “some of the most consequential and important” decisions in the Supreme Court’s history overturned prior rulings. He cited such cases as the historic civil rights case Brown v. Board of Education, which struck down legalized segregation, and Miranda v. Arizona, which required police to inform suspects they have a right to remain silent.
“If the court had done that in those cases (and adhered to precedent), this country would be a much different place,” Kavanaugh said. Why then, he asked Rikelman, shouldn’t the court do the same in Dobbs, if it were to deem that Roe and Casey were wrongly decided?
“Because the view that a previous precedent is wrong, your honor, has never been enough for this court to overrule, and it certainly shouldn’t be enough here, when there’s 50 years of precedent,” Rikelman responded. The court needs a “special justification” to take such a step, she argued, saying that Mississippi has failed to provide any.
Said Rikelman: “It makes the same exact arguments the court already considered and rejected in its stare decisis analysis in Casey.”
Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., a conservative, took up a similar line of questioning with Prelogar, the U.S. solicitor general.
“Is it your argument that a case can never be overruled simply because it was egregiously wrong?” he asked.
“I think that at the very least, the state would have to come forward with some kind of materially changed circumstance or some kind of materially new argument, and Mississippi hasn’t done so in this case,” Prelogar responded.
“Really?” Alito replied. “So suppose Plessy versus Ferguson (an 1896 decision that affirmed the constitutionality of racial segregation laws) was re-argued in 1897, so nothing had changed. Would it not be sufficient to say that was an egregiously wrong decision on the day it was handed down and now it should be overruled?”
“I think it should have been overruled, but I think that the factual premise was wrong in the moment it was decided, and the court realized that and clarified that when it overruled in Brown,” Prelogar said.
“So there are circumstances in which a decision may be overruled, properly overruled, when it must be overruled simply because it was egregiously wrong at the moment it was decided?” Alito asked.
When Prelogar didn’t directly answer the question, Alito pressed again.
“Can a decision be overruled simply because it was erroneously wrong, even if nothing has changed between the time of that decision and the time when the court is called upon to consider whether it should be overruled?” he asked. “Yes or no? Can you give me a yes or no answer on that?”
“This court, no, has never overruled in that situation just based on a conclusion that the decision was wrong. It has always applied the stare decisis factors and likewise found that they warrant overruling in that instance,” Prelogar said.
Roberts cites China, North Korea
While the main focus of Wednesday’s proceeding related to stare decisis, there was also discussion of the viability standard established by Roe.
“I’d like to focus on the 15-week ban because that’s not a dramatic departure from viability,” Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said in an exchange with Rikelman.
“It is the standard that the vast majority of other countries have. When you get to the viability standard (set at 24 to 28 weeks) we share that standard with the People’s Republic of China and North Korea,” he said.
In response, Rikelman said Roberts’ statement was “not correct,” arguing that “the majority of countries that permit legal access to abortion allow access right up until viability, even if they have nominal lines earlier.” She elaborated that while European countries may have 12- or 18-week limits, they allow exceptions for “broad social reasons, health reasons, socioeconomic reasons.”
A 2021 analysis by the Charlotte Lozier Institute found that 47 out of 50 European nations limit elective abortion prior to 15 weeks. Eight European nations, including Great Britain and Finland, do not allow elective abortion and instead require a specific medical or socioeconomic reason before permitting an abortion, the institute said.
The court may not announce a decision in the Dobbs case for several months. It may come at the end of its current term, in late June or early July, when major decisions are often announced.
[…]
It has been one year since Biden was inaugurated. He continues to call himself a devout Catholic and receive Holy Communion whenever he wants. It is an ongoing scandal that discredits the Church hierarchy from Francis on down. What has become of the (watered-down) Eucharistic Coherence Statement anyway? It is collecting dust on the shelf.
This pitiful excuse of a Catholic fails to manifest the life of Christ. Such a sorry soul deserves lots of prayer; the sin of murder cries out to God from the earth. Neither fossil fuels nor Trump are the cause of Joe’s and America’s problems. Murder is.
Bergoglio, Cupich, Tobin, Gregory, McElroy, Stowe and a pack of other hirelings should be hanging their heads in shame. So where is Biden’s “seamless garment” of life, bishops, now that your “man of character,” the “one you can talk with” is determined to codify murder as a fundamental right?
Biden is a “trans-Catholic”, i.e a person who self-identifies as a Catholic without actually meeting the objective criteria to qualify as one.
How much more proof does the American Catholic hierarchy require that Biden must be excommunicated? The American bishops’ collective failure to do this while issuing vapid and toothless documents on “Eucharistic coherence” leaves each and all of them with the blood of the murdered innocents on their hands and their heads. It has reached the point where the question must be asked whether the American bishops are themselves Catholics.
1) When referring to Biden’s professed ‘faith’ it would be appreciated if you would not capitalize it.
2) It is worth our while to point out again – and again and again – that ALL of its most fervent adherents REFUSE whenever possible to use that ugliest, most foul of words –
Abortion
Say it again
Abortion
If Catholics had voted the Church’s teaching on abortion even once during the past half century, killing babies would be the third rail of American politics. Untouchable.
Any candidate pursuing supporting abortion would have no hope of winning and would be summarily bounced from public life.
American Catholics, take warning: By ignoring your Church’s most fundamental teachings and voting for Democrats, you have assumed primary responsibility for this monstrous holocaust, the like of which humanity has never seen before.
I am waiting to hear the strong words of condemnation about this from the bishops – such as, this is “unfortunate”, “problematic”, “hurtful”, etc. These strong words would be uttered prior to giving him communion.
Cackles and Chairman Joe support a “right” that is not in the Constitution, while denying the unborn a right that IS in the Constitution — LIFE, liberty and pursuit of happiness. Roe was wrongly decided and gave women a “right” to murder their babies. It’s not a right. It’s a horrible wrong.
Canon 915 forbids Biden from Holy Communion. His bishops fail to enforce it. We can only speculate as to why they’re refusing to perform this obligation.
Joe Biden, along with every other First World nation, unapologitically and wholeheartedly support abortion. To subsidise this, they also support unlimited immigration or our populations would decline.
It is truly a bargain with the devil.
The man in the photo at the head of this article is not Catholic.
Pope Francis meets President Joe Biden on Oct. 29, 2021. / Vatican Media/CNA
That photo! VIEWER DISCRETION ADVISED HOLD YOUR BREAKFAST!
Where’s the catechesis, the SPIRITUAL FATHERHOOD? HUH?
If the Bishops lacked the courage to make a public statement about Biden and his abortion stance, they were free to approach him privately and say he may not go to Communion until there was a change in his public statements. Ditto, the Pope could have met with Biden, as he is the Head of the USA, a position of tremendous power. They could even have just met privately, sans public media. But he didn’t have to seem so happy and glad to do so. Facial expressions say a great deal, as does silence. Words, and a very public statement, are not always necessary to get the mission accomplished.
We overlook the historic and multicultural tradition now “affirmed” by our very own Joe Biden…
…the Roman emperor Caligula credited for his cruelty, perversions, and such; the Turko-Mongolian Tamerlane, credited with erecting towers of human heads to mark his passing (but probably only 42,000 heads in all); the Aztec Montezuma, from a long line of indigenous emperor-surgeons famous for involuntary open-heart surgeries (in the tens of thousands); and the notoriously “bloodthirsty” Sultan Moulay Ismail Ibn Sharif from the world of Islam in Morocco…
Now to the New World: since 1973 some 62 million and counting…whom under the sleepy-eyed and weather-vane Biden, and Aztec princess Pelosi (the “sacred ground” of late-term and post-birth abortions) would be codified into Federal Law, and then federally funded by compulsion from a national taxpayer populace.
So, a multicultural and sobering thingy—but that’s dead-on-arrival in Congress, except as an election bullet-point to be parroted by complicit media talking heads seeking prime-time market share.
Nothing good comes supeficial piety and a complete lack of fear of God. Maybe it’s intuition based on my reading of human history, devoid of divine revelation; but I can see how this man is leading this entire nation into complete corruption and ultimate doom.
By the obvious throwing his support to Biden, Bergoglio, as pictured above, is implicitly supporting the killing of babies. Would Pius XII have allowed himself to be pictured with Hitler knowing full well that Hitler was, at the same time, authorizing the execution of Jews just because they were Jews?
52 years ago. {1968} Way back in the mists of time.A little band called the Rolling Stones sang a song called “Sympathy for the Devil”. As the above photo illustrates our current Pope has NO problem shaking and patting the hand of the Devil.All while smiling
happily, and passing on his words of Sympathy. Even the blonde lady witness to this defilement smiles agreeably.The only one NOT smiling? Christ hanging on the wall behind all three of these good friends.
Luke 16:10 –
He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much.
“Therefore, whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of sinning against the body and blood of the Lord. A man ought to examine himself before he eats of the bread and drinks of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without recognizing the body of the Lord eats and drinks judgment on himself.” I Corinthians 11.27-29.
The leaders of every world religion ought to be schooled in the most up-to-date research concerning the methods of natural birth control. There are videos presented on the Internet that Cycle Technologies, in coordination with the Georgetown University Institute for Reproductive Health, has made available for any cleric or lay person to view. (Including political leaders.) These methods include the Standard Days — CycleBeads, and TwoDay methods.
Aborting late-term babies (or any baby) because women are ignorant of the total range of options at their disposal is the perpetuation of mankind’s most grievous fallen nature. The bishops (“overseers”) of the Catholic Church need to re-think their approach, and turn to more intense education of these natural birth control strategies.
18 months later we have that disgusting picture, which begs the question – what more need be said?
Joe, you of the Rosary in your pocket, I have a question – what is the 4th Luminous mystery?