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Supreme Court Upholds Late Abortion Ban: Right-wing Judicial Activism Run Amok

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-19-07 06:39 PM
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Supreme Court Upholds Late Abortion Ban: Right-wing Judicial Activism Run Amok
http://www.alternet.org/rights/50723/?page=1

Supreme Court Upholds Late Abortion Ban: Right-wing Judicial Activism Run Amok

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted April 18, 2007.

Bush’s court-packing pays off, and Democrats who voted for Scalia and Roberts get their comeuppance.


Last year, in defending his decision to vote for the confirmation of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, Senator Bill Nelson (D-NE) said that it was based, in part, on Alito's "pledge that he would not bring a political agenda to the court."

Today, Nelson and the 18 other Democratic Senators who voted against the attempted filibuster of Alito reaped what they sowed. The new court -- the first in American history made up of a majority of conservative Catholics -- upheld the 2003 ban on so-called "partial birth" abortions, a made-up term that's become a hot-button issue for social conservatives, but is largely based on junk science and flies in the face of medical "best practices." It will go down as a text-book case of right-wing judicial activism, with the justices essentially overruling the medical community.

In upholding the ban, the Supreme Court overturned a critical legal principle that's guided courts for almost two decades: that any restriction on abortion must have an exception for the life and health of the pregnant woman.

That principle was the key to the landmark decision, Stenberg v. Carhart, which overturned a similar ban in Nebraska. Stenberg, while split five to four, was not a wishy-washy decision. The majority found that Nebraska's law violated the constitution as interpreted in both Roe v. Wade and the 1992 case, Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

The Supremes made two important findings in that case. First, the Nebraska ban didn't have an exception for cases when the health of the mother might be threatened. Second, the court found that the ban on "partial-birth abortions" (a term coined by abortion foes that appears nowhere in the medical literature) was too vague and, as such, placed too great a burden on a woman's right to determine her own care.

It's worth noting that Alito cited Carhart in 2000, when, as a member of the Third District Court of Appeals, he voted to strike down New Jersey's ban on late-term abortions. "The New Jersey statute," he wrote, "like its Nebraska counterpart, lacks an exception for the preservation of the health of the mother. Without such an exception, the New Jersey statute is irreconcilable with . What's more, Alito supported the court's finding that "the Nebraska applied, not only to the "dilation and extraction" or D & X procedure, but also to the more commonly used D & E procedure." In other words, Alito agreed that the ban could apply to all sorts of otherwise legal abortion procedures.

more...
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Captain_Nemo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-19-07 07:44 PM
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1. Scary stuff for our democracy
From Seattle Times
seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2003672544_scotus19.html

These two quotes by Scalia and Kennedy are particulary unnerving:

"Justice Anthony Kennedy, speaking for the court, said the government may not forbid abortion outright, but it "may use its voice and its regulatory authority" to dissuade women from ending pregnancies."

(What gives them the authority to dissuade me from choosing how big my family is?)

"In its decision, the high court said the "government has a legitimate and substantial interest in preserving and promoting fetal life."

(interest in preserving and promoting fetal life....hmmm with all of the violence in our country towards women adn girls they feel the need to protect a fetus. And, fetusus on ly live in women's bodies.)

Rough times before us I am afraid.
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