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What follows is a press release and backgrounder from the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) in Washington, D.C., issued on Tuesday, July 19, 2005, at 9 PM EDT. For further information, call 202-626-8825, send e-mail to Legfederal@aol.com, or visit the NRLC website at
http://www.nrlc.org/
ROBERTS NOMINATION
HIGHLIGHTS
UPCOMING CASES ON
PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION, PARENTAL
NOTIFICATION
WASHINGTON -- Following today's
announcement regarding the
nomination of Judge John G. Roberts
to serve as associate justice on the
U.S. Supreme Court, the following
statement was issued by the National
Right to Life Committee (NRLC) in
Washington, D.C.
“Liberal pressure groups
will insist that Senate Democrats
filibuster against Judge Roberts,
unless he pledges in advance to vote
against allowing elected legislators
to place meaningful limits on
abortion," said NRLC Legislative
Director Douglas Johnson. "Millions
of Americans will be watching to see
if the Democratic senators bow to
these demands."
In an interview conducted by
Hugh Hewitt with Nan Aron, president
of the liberal Alliance for Justice,
on April 11, 2005, the following
exchange occurred: Hewitt: "Do you
oppose and urge a filibuster for
John Roberts?" Aron: "Yes, we
would." See:
http://www.hughhewitt.com/nan_aron_interview.htm
In 1990, as a Justice
Department official under the
administration of President George
H. W. Bush, Roberts wrote a brief in
a pending Supreme Court case stating
the Administration position "that
Roe was wrongly decided and should
be overruled. . ."
After being nominated in
2001 by President George W. Bush to
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia, Judge Roberts
was reported favorably out of the
Senate Judiciary Committee by a vote
of 16-3, and confirmed by the Senate
by unanimous consent on May 8, 2003.
ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND
INFORMATION:
RECENT AND UPCOMING ABORTION CASES
The current Supreme Court,
including Justices Rehnquist and
O'Connor, is divided 6 to 3 in favor
of the Roe v. Wade doctrine that
abortion must be allowed for any
reason until "viability" (about five
and one-half months), and for
"health" reasons (broadly defined)
even during the last three months of
pregnancy. The myth that the
current Supreme Court is divided 5
to 4 on Roe, although cultivated by
some pro-abortion polemicists and
repeated by some journalists, was
refuted by Annenberg Center's
FactCheck.org here:
http://www.factcheck.org/article176.html
However, “The Supreme Court
is clearly divided 5-4 on
partial-birth abortion,” Johnson
said. "The successor to Justice
O'Connor will cast the deciding vote
on whether the brutal partial-birth
abortion method remains legal."
On July 8, in the case of
Carhart v. Gonzales, the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
ruled that the federal Partial-Birth
Abortion Ban Act, signed into law by
President Bush in 2003, is invalid
because it conflicts with the 2000
Supreme Court decision in Stenberg
v. Carhart. In that Supreme Court
case, five justices struck down
Nebraska's ban on partial-birth
abortion. The effect of this
Supreme Court ruling was to
invalidate the laws enacted by more
than half the states to ban
partial-birth abortion, an abortion
method in which a living premature
infant is mostly delivered alive
before being killed by puncturing
her skull and removing her brain.
O'Connor voted in the majority to
strike down the bans on
partial-birth abortion in that 5-4
ruling.
"Five years ago, five
justices of the Supreme Court,
including Justice O'Connor, ruled
that Roe v. Wade allows an
abortionist to perform a
partial-birth abortion any time he
sees a 'health' benefit, even if the
woman and her unborn baby are
entirely healthy," Johnson said.
"The Eighth Circuit ruling in
Carhart v. Gonzales was based
entirely on the prior 5-4 Supreme
Court decision." NRLC's complete
statement on the Eight Circuit
ruling is here:
http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/pba/Release070805.html
Moreover, the Supreme Court may also
be divided 5 to 4 on the question of
parental notification for abortion.
The Court has already accepted for
the fall term the case of Ayotte v.
Planned Parenthood, a case in which
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
First Circuit struck down New
Hampshire's parental notification
law. If the Supreme Court adopted
the approach of the First Circuit
ruling in this case, it could gut
the parental notification laws of a
number of other states as well.
Based on past cases, it appears most
likely that the current Court would
split 4-4 on the case, with O'Connor
(who has voted both for and against
specific parental involvement laws
in the past) as the deciding vote.
MYTHS ABOUT ROE
Some journalists and some
pollsters continue to describe a
fictional Roe v. Wade. For example,
an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll
conducted by Hart/McInturff July
8-11, 2005, presented respondents
with this misleading statement:
"The Supreme Court's 1973 Roe versus
Wade decision established a woman's
constitutional right to an abortion,
at least in the first three months
of pregnancy." Likewise, pollsters
with the Princeton Survey Research
Associates International, polling
for the Pew Research Center for the
People & the Press survey on June
8-12, 2005, misinformed respondents,
"In 1973 the Roe versus Wade
decision established a woman's
constitutional right to an abortion,
at least in the first three months
of pregnancy."
These wordings falsely
suggest that the "right" created by
the Supreme Court ruling applies
fully only during "the first three
months of pregnancy," a concept that
the Court itself has forcefully
repudiated on numerous occasions.
For example, in the 1992 Casey
ruling the Court reaffirmed Roe v.
Wade, but the Court explicitly
rejected any distinction whatever
between the first and second
trimester, stating, "We reject the
trimester framework, which we do not
consider to be part of the essential
holding of Roe." In the most recent
ruling on abortion, Stenberg v.
Carhart (2000), the Court majority
reaffirmed that restrictions on
reasons for abortion or methods of
abortion are impermissible up until
"viability," which is near the end
of the SECOND trimester (and, that
states must permit abortion for
"health" reasons even during the
final months of pregnancy). Indeed,
even though partial-birth abortions
ARE NEVER performed in the first
trimester, the Court majority ruled
that partial-birth abortions are
FULLY protected by Roe v. Wade.
Much of the public has been misled into
believing that "overturning Roe v. Wade" means
the same thing as "banning all abortions." This
misinformation greatly distorts the public
debate over the Supreme Court and Roe v. Wade.
Yet some news outlets continue to reinforce this
distortion. For example, a page one story in
USA TODAY on July 5 discussed whether the
President "will name a justice who would vote to
outlaw" abortion. Yet no Supreme Court justice
has voted "to outlaw" abortion. Instead,
Rehnquist and others have voted to allow
democratically elected lawmakers to decide what
degree of protection should be provided for
unborn children. As the leading pro-abortion
litigation group expressed it last year: "A
Supreme Court decision overturning Roe would not
by itself make abortion illegal in the United
States. Instead, a reversal of Roe would remove
federal constitutional protection for a woman’s
right to choose and give the states the power to
set abortion policy." ("What if Roe Fell?,"
Center for Reproductive Rights, September 2004)
National Right to Life is
the nation's largest pro-life
organization, with 50 state
affiliates and approximately 3,000
local affiliates nationwide. NRLC
works through legislation and
education to protect those
threatened by abortion, infanticide,
euthanasia, and assisted suicide.
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