New Court Decision Suggests Supreme Court Should Reconsider Roe v. Wade
Elizabeth Slattery /
This week, an Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled against North Dakota’s fetal heartbeat law.
Though the state has been ordered to not enforce the law, the appeals court strongly signaled that the Supreme Court should revisit its abortion precedents, including Roe v. Wade.
Passed in 2013, North Dakota’s H.B. 1456 makes it a felony for a physician to perform an abortion once the unborn baby’s heartbeat is detected, except in cases of medical emergencies.
An unborn baby’s heartbeat is detectable at about 6-7 weeks. Under current Supreme Court jurisprudence, states may not prohibit women from having an abortion before the unborn baby is “viable”—when the baby is capable of living outside the womb (with or without medical assistance).
At the time Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973, a baby was considered viable after the second trimester (27-28 weeks), whereas today, babies generally are viable at 24 weeks—and sometimes even earlier.
The New England Journal of Medicine put out a study earlier this year documenting successful cases of babies born at 22 weeks gestation.
In Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court used the trimester framework to determine, at what point during a pregnancy, the government’s interest in protecting the unborn child outweighed a woman’s ability to terminate her pregnancy.
The Court added to this framework in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), determining that states may not pass regulations before viability that have the “purpose or effect of placing a substantial burden in the path of a woman seeking an abortion.”
But in 2007 with Gonzalez v. Carhartthe Court determined that such regulations are subject only to rational basis review—the lowest standard of review—which requires that a law be rationally related to a legitimate state interest.
A North Dakota abortion clinic challenged H.B. 1456, and a district court in Bismarck, N.D. barred enforcement of the law, finding that it “clearly prohibits pre-viability abortions … thereby imposing an undue burden on women seeking to obtain abortions.”
The Eighth Circuit panel affirmed the Bismarck district court ruling, but noted there are “good reasons” for the Supreme Court to reconsider its abortion jurisprudence. The panel wrote:
“By deeming viability ‘the point at which the balance of interests tips’ … the Court has tied a state’s interest in unborn children to developments in obstetrics, not to developments in the unborn. This leads to troubling consequences for states seeking to protect unborn children.”
Accordingly, this means whether an unborn baby may be protected by the state depends on the year and current state of medicine, which is untenable as a legal standard.
The panel stated that this is a matter “better left to the states, which might find their interest in protecting unborn children better served by a more consistent and certain marker than viability.”
The Eighth Circuit panel concluded, “To substitute its own preference to that of the legislature in this area is not the proper role of a court.”
Indeed, the Supreme Court’s abortion cases prevent states from passing reforms reflecting the “advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.” The panel also pointed out that the Supreme Court has not taken into account the physical and emotional toll of abortions, as Norma McCorvey (“Jane Roe” in Roe v. Wade) and others have revealed.
Neither has the Court considered the sad realities of the abortion industry, from Philadelphia abortionist Kermit Gosnell’s “house of horrors” to the recent allegations of Planned Parenthood’s alleged harvesting and sale of parts from aborted unborn babies.
As a lower court, the Eight Circuit panel was right not to overrule Supreme Court precedents—that’s a task reserved for the Supreme Court itself.
But the justices should heed the panel’s advice and revisit their deleterious abortion jurisprudence.