Supreme Court firmly backs abortion
rights, tosses Texas law
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[June 28, 2016]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court on Monday struck down a Texas abortion law imposing strict
regulations on doctors and facilities in the strongest endorsement of
abortion rights in America in more than two decades.
The 5-3 ruling held that the Republican-backed 2013 Texas law
placed an undue burden on women exercising their right under the
U.S. Constitution to end a pregnancy, established in the court's
landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.
The abortion providers who challenged the law said it was medically
unnecessary and specifically intended to shut clinics.
Texas officials said it was intended to protect women's health. The
ruling means similar laws in other states are probably
unconstitutional and could put in jeopardy other types of abortion
restrictions enacted in various conservative states.
"The decision should send a loud signal to politicians that they can
no longer hide behind sham rationales to shut down clinics and
prevent a woman who has decided to end a pregnancy from getting the
care she needs," said Jennifer Dalven, a lawyer with the American
Civil Liberties Union.
President Barack Obama, whose administration backed the abortion
providers in the court challenge, said in a statement he was
"pleased to see the Supreme Court protect women's rights and health"
and that restrictions like those in Texas "harm women's health and
place an unconstitutional obstacle in the path of a woman's
reproductive freedom."
Conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy joined the court's four liberal
members in the ruling, with the remaining three conservatives
dissenting. The court declared that both key provisions of the law -
requiring abortion doctors to have difficult-to-obtain "admitting
privileges" at a local hospital and requiring clinics to have costly
hospital-grade facilities - violated a woman's right to an abortion.
Writing for the court, liberal Justice Stephen Breyer said, "We
conclude that neither of these provisions offers medical benefits
sufficient to justify the burdens upon access that each imposes."
"Each places a substantial obstacle in the path of women seeking a
pre-viability abortion, each constitutes an undue burden on abortion
access, and each violates the federal Constitution," Breyer added.
Deferring to state legislatures over "questions of medical
uncertainty is also inconsistent with this court's case law," Breyer
added.
The ruling in the case, Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt,
represented the most vigorous affirmation of abortion rights in the
United States since a 1992 ruling affirmed a woman's right to have
the procedure.
On a warm sunny summer day, hundreds of people on both sides of the
issue converged on the Supreme Court building, with abortion rights
advocates dancing and celebrating after the ruling. "We're ecstatic.
The reality is today women won," abortion rights activist Marcela
Howell said.
The law was passed by a Republican-led legislature and signed by a
Republican governor in 2013. Ten states currently have admitting
privileges requirements on the books while six have laws requiring
hospital-grade facilities. Lower courts have blocked admitting
privileges provisions in five states and halted facilities
regulations in two states.
"The decision erodes states’ lawmaking authority to safeguard the
health and safety of women and subjects more innocent life to being
lost. Texas' goal is to protect innocent life, while ensuring the
highest health and safety standards for women," Republican Texas
Governor Greg Abbott said.
Since the law was passed, the number of abortion clinics in Texas,
the second-most-populous U.S. state with about 27 million people,
had dropped from 41 to 19.
The Supreme Court has appeals pending in two cases involving
admitting privilege laws in Mississippi and Wisconsin on which it
could act as soon as Tuesday.
The Texas law required abortion doctors to have "admitting
privileges," a type of formal affiliation, at a hospital within 30
miles (48 km) of the clinic so they can treat patients needing
surgery or other critical care.
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Demonstrators celebrate at the Supreme Court after the court struck
down a Texas law imposing strict regulations on abortion doctors and
facilities. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
The law also required clinic buildings to possess costly,
hospital-grade facilities. These regulations covered numerous
building features such as corridor width, the swinging motion of
doors, floor tiles, parking spaces, elevator size, ventilation,
electrical wiring, plumbing, floor tiling and even the angle that
water flows from drinking fountains.
PUBLIC OPINION SPLIT
Americans remain closely divided over whether abortion should be
legal. In a Reuters/Ipsos online poll involving 6,769 U.S. adults
conducted from June 3 to June 22, 47 percent of respondents said
abortion generally should be legal and 42 percent said it generally
should be illegal.
Views on abortion in the United States have changed very little over
the decades, according to historical polling data.
The last time the justices decided a major abortion case was nine
years ago when they ruled 5-4 to uphold a federal law banning a
late-term abortion procedure.
Amy Hagstrom Miller, founder and CEO of Whole Woman’s Health, which
led the challenge to the Texas law, said, "Every day Whole Woman’s
Health treats our patients with compassion, respect and dignity -
and today the Supreme Court did the same. We’re thrilled that today
justice was served and our clinics stay open."
Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton on
Twitter called the ruling "a victory for women in Texas and across
America."
"This fight isn't over: The next president has to protect women's
health. Women won't be 'punished' for exercising their basic
rights," she said, a dig at presumptive Republican presidential
nominee Donald Trump, who once suggested women who get illegal
abortions should face "some sort of punishment." The presidential
election is Nov. 8.
Some U.S. states have pursued a variety of restrictions on abortion,
including banning certain types of procedures, prohibiting it after
a certain number of weeks of gestation, requiring parental
permission for girls until a certain age, imposing waiting periods
or mandatory counseling, and others.
"It's exceedingly unfortunate that the court has taken the ability
to protect women’s health out of the hands of Texas citizens and
their duly-elected representatives," Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton, a Republican, said in a statement.
Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Clarence Thomas and Justice
Samuel Alito dissented. The normally nine-justice court was one
member short after the Feb. 13 death of conservative Justice Antonin
Scalia, who consistently opposed abortion in past rulings.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Adam DeRose,
Jon Herskovitz and David Ingram; Editing by Will Dunham)
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