By Jonathon Van Maren
The prestigious Wall Street Journal has chosen a side in the abortion wars. On April 26, WSJ published an editorial titled “Abortion and the Supreme Court: This is the moment for the Justices to turn the issue over to the voters.” The editors urged the Justices to use the Mississippi case Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health to overturn Roe v. Wade, which (with the accompanying Doe v. Bolton ruling) legalized abortion in all 50 states up until fetal viability. In 1992, the Supreme Court passed up an opportunity to overturn Roe, instead upholding its primary holdings in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.
The Court’s ruling is expected to come sometime in June, and many pro-life leaders are hopeful for the first time in decades. Dr. Robert P. George of Princeton University, for example, penned a column for First Things last October titled “Roe Will Go.” The questions posed by the justices to the lawyer for the abortion industry seemed to indicate that a majority are at least considering an overthrow of Roe rather than a limited pro-life victory simply permitting pro-life legislatures to ban abortion earlier in pregnancy (such as 15 weeks, as the Mississippi law seeks to do.)
In a major move, the editors of The Wall Street Journal have joined voices like George in publicly making the case for the end of Roe, writing in part:
Far better for the Court to leave the thicket of abortion regulation and return the issue to the states. A political uproar would ensue, but then voters would decide on abortion policy through elections—starting in November … In Dobbs, the Court can say that such a profound moral question should be decided by the people, not by nine unelected judges.
Worryingly, the editors also wondered if justices — most notably, erratic swing vote Chief Justice John Roberts — might be susceptible to influence by a “ferocious lobbying campaign” by pro-abortion groups, and whether he might be attempting to sway other justices to join him in declining to overturn Roe. If this were to happen, they wrote, Roberts “could write the plurality opinion that controls in a 6-3 decision. If he can’t, then Justice [Clarence] Thomas would assign the opinion and the vote could be 5-4. Our guess is that Justice [Samuel] Alito would then get the assignment.”
The editors then stated, “We hope [Roberts] doesn’t succeed — for the good of the Court and the country. The Chief’s middle ground might be explainable with some legal dexterity, but it would prolong the Court’s abortion agony … After a series of elections, abortion law will sort itself out democratically. That had started to happen before the Supreme Court intervened in Roe, embittering the abortion debate and damaging the Court. In Dobbs, the Court can say that such a profound moral question should be decided by the people, not by nine unelected judges.”
READ THE REST OF THIS COLUMN HERE
For what it’s worth, Robert P. George has retracted his prediction that Justice Roberts will overturn Roe. Roe still gets overturned but it will be 5-1-3, with Roberts concurring that the Mississippi law be upheld but ruling more narrowly that it can be done while still preserving abortion on demand up to 15 weeks.
That is very interesting–where has he said this? I’d like to factor that into my next piece.
See here:
https://twitter.com/McCormickProf/status/1519827633156022272