The replacement of Justice Anthony Kennedy by Justice Brett
Kavanaugh on the U. S. Supreme Court has inspired great hope among
pro-life Americans that Roe v. Wade's days could be numbered.
Ending the destructive legacy of Roe is one of the
principal goals of the pro-life movement, but contrary to a common
misperception, abortion would not be outlawed throughout our nation when Roe is overturned. So, what would the legal landscape look like when Roe is no more?
Unfortunately, in a post-Roe nation only eleven states,
comprising about twenty percent of the U.S. population, would
immediately ban abortion. This is because after Roe, only seven states retained their abortion bans "on the books" (but unenforceable under Roe), and four states that had repealed their pre-Roe statutes subsequently enacted so-called "trigger statutes" saying that abortion is prohibited immediately upon the repeal of Roe.
The other thirty-nine states, comprising about eighty percent of the population, would allow abortion post-Roe unless bans were enacted. In addition, ten states face a higher hurdle to overcome in banning abortion post-Roe because their state Supreme Courts recognize a "right" to abortion in their state Constitutions.
So, what are the prospects of overturning Roe in the next
few years? It depends upon which pro-life legal expert one asks. Some
think that the Court is more likely to attack Roe incrementally and others think it could overturn Roe all at once.
There are some cases in the judicial "pipeline" now that could
be taken up by the Court within the next year or two. One case involves
an Indiana law that prohibits abortions based on the unborn child's
race, sex, or disability. The Seventh Circuit Court struck the ban down
as unconstitutional and the state of Indiana has asked the Supreme Court
to review that decision.
Laws banning second-trimester "dismemberment" abortions have
been enacted in nine states. Two of the laws are in effect and the other
seven have been enjoined pending outcomes of litigation. Two of the
enjoined laws are presently before U.S. Appellate Courts in the Fifth
and Eighth Circuits.
In addition, laws requiring abortionists to have admitting
privileges in a nearby hospital could also soon work their way to the
Supreme Court. Such laws were enacted in Missouri and Louisiana and were
upheld by U.S. Appellate Courts in the Eighth and Fifth Circuits
respectively.
It's important to know that the Court can use any abortion law (even if it doesn't strike at the heart of Roe) to revisit and repeal Roe,
but it takes five willing Justices to do so. Please pray and fast that
at least five of the justices currently on the Court would be so willing
to revisit and overturn Roe.