Moyle v US asks if federal law protects women whose pregnancies threaten their health
Supreme Court justices wrote that they were returning the issue of abortion to “legislative bodies”. Two years on, that sounds like wishful thinking: the court finds itself right back in the middle of America’s abortion battle. A month ago the issue was access to abortion pills—a fight opponents of abortion seem destined to lose. On April 24th the question was whether state bans that criminalise terminations are trumped by a federal law concerning emergency care.
Joshua Turner, defending Idaho’s statute, faced a barrage from the three liberal justices. Idaho’s law explicitly recognises abortion as the standard of medical care when a woman’s “life is in peril”, Justice Elana Kagan noted. So can’textend that same standard to cases when her “health is in peril” and she could “lose her reproductive organs”? Well, Mr Turner said, that raises “tough medical questions that implicate deeply theological and moral questions” states should answer.
The Court’s conservative justices largely steered clear of questions of women’s reproductive health. But they voiced three lines of attack on the Biden administration’s position, suggesting that their sympathies lay with Idaho.was enacted under the constitution’s Spending Clause and probed whether it was proper for the government to withhold Medicare funds unless emergency abortions are provided. Mr Turner argued that such conditions must be “clear and unambiguous” in the statute itself.
One objection to the Biden administration’s position seemed to gain more traction: the worry that adding a health exception viawould invite a host of elective abortions via mental-health claims.
Ireland Latest News, Ireland Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Supreme Court Will Hear Challenge to Idaho’s Near-Total Abortion BanA sign taped to a hanger hangs near the Idaho Capitol in Boise after protests against the state over new abortion laws, which effectively banned the procedure.
Read more »
Abortion-pill foes get a chilly reception at the Supreme CourtThe justices are sceptical that the plaintiffs have “standing” to challenge mifepristone
Read more »
US Supreme Court to weigh restrictions on abortion pillThe Supreme Court reenters the contentious legal battle over abortion on Tuesday as it weighs restrictions on the drug that is most widely used in the United States to terminate pregnancies.
Read more »
Supreme Court to Decide Whether Donald Trump Can Be Criminally ProsecutedFormer U.S. President Donald Trump appears in court for his trial for allegedly covering up hush money payments at Manhattan Criminal Court on April 23, 2024 in New York City.
Read more »
Supreme Court Will Take Up the Legal Fight Over Ghost Guns, Firearms Without Serial NumbersThe Supreme Court of the United States is seen in Washington on March 26, 2024.
Read more »
Supreme Court allows Relevent Sports case vs. U.S. Soccer to proceedThe U.S. Supreme Court has allowed Relevent Sports’ antitrust case against U.S. Soccer and FIFA to proceed, keeping alive the possibility that regular season matches between foreign clubs could take place on U.S. soil.
Read more »