Getty ImagesThe StoryThe Supreme Court is planning to end the right to an abortion. It’s happening?That’s what it looks like. Yesterday, Politico published a copy of a draft ruling in the Mississippi case, Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health. This is the state’s 2018 law that banned abortions after 15 weeks and offered no exceptions for cases of rape or incest. Since then, dozens of states have intro’d six-week abortion bans. And places like Texas and Oklahoma are incentivizing citizens to enforce them. What does the draft say?That SCOTUS is ruling in favor of Mississippi. But not only that. It’s also reportedly overturning two key decisions: Roe v Wade: the 1973 decision that women have the constitutional right to an abortion. Planned Parenthood v Casey: the 1992 decision that affirmed the right to an abortion and protected women from dealing with undue burdens trying to get them. Justice Samuel Alito — who wrote this draft majority opinion — called Roe “egregiously wrong." And said it established a right to privacy that wasn’t written anywhere in the Constitution. Four other conservative justices reportedly joined Alito in this decision: Clarence Thomas and the court's three Trump-appointed justices: Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. The three liberal justices are believed to be working on dissents. It's unclear how Chief Justice John Roberts will vote — but even if he sided with the liberals it wouldn‘t change the outcome. So is this official?Not yet. This was a leak, and an unprecedented one at that: never in modern history has a draft SCOTUS opinion been disclosed before a decision was announced. The final opinion was expected to be announced publicly by June or July. It could still go through edits. But if SCOTUS rules to remove abortion protections, over 20 states have laws in place to immediately ban or restrict the procedure. What does this mean for women across the country?A lot. Before Roe v Wade, those seeking an abortion were subjected to dangerous, expensive, and sometimes out-of-state options — often conducting the procedure on themselves or without registered doctors. It's important to note that abortion is still a constitutional right today and every day until the court rules officially. But when it does, that constitutional right ends. What then?It will be up to states to decide whether terminating a pregnancy is legal and at what point. Or whether they criminalize it. Meanwhile, Republicans are reportedly planning the next stage of anti-abortion measures: trying to ban abortions on the federal level. theSkimm Women's reproductive rights have long been a hotly contested issue in the US. But it's also one that affects more people than some may think. About one in four women in the US have an abortion before the age of 45. The reasons are personal, medical, complex, and protected by the Constitution. That last part could end — and Americans are already protesting. PS: Here's what overturning Roe v Wade could mean for your health. |