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USA Today, July 27, 2005
COLUMN: If 'Roe'
Were Overturned
The battle over the Supreme Court
nominee and abortion is so much fuss for so
little turf. Few states would likely ban abortion
-- and very few women would be left without
'choice.'
Author : Laura Vanderkam
So far, most senators are withholding judgment
in the battle to confirm Judge John Roberts,
nominated by President Bush to replace retiring
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme
Court, but that hasn't stopped everyone else
from trying desperately to discern the nominee's
views.
Pundits are making a mini-scandal over whether
Roberts was ever a member of the Federalist
Society, a conservative legal group. Ralph
Neas, president of the liberal People for the
American Way, is fretting over Roberts' "sparse
public record." James Dobson, head of
Focus on the Family, told supporters, "We
need to be in prayer that Judge Roberts' true
colors will become apparent before a final
confirmation decision is reached."
The real issue at hand
On both sides, people talk broadly about wanting
to know Roberts' views because the next judge
will shape the "direction" of the
country, but let's not mince words. Most of
this angst is about one issue: abortion. Liberal
groups are terrified that Roberts will bring
the court one vote closer to overturning Roe
v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that overturned state
laws banning abortion. Pro-life groups hope,
fervently, that he will.
I don't know whether the Supreme Court, with
Roberts, will overturn Roe. I do know it won't
matter much if it does.
You see, for all the rights rhetoric, abortion
is not an abstract concept. It's a medical
procedure requiring a doctor willing to perform
it. In states where abortion is frowned upon
-- the states likely to ban abortion if Roe
is overturned -- abortion providers are already
more rare than purple Volkswagen Beetles. Most
abortion providers, understandably, prefer
to practice in states where people support
them, i.e., states where abortion won't be
banned.
This reality means that however much energy is
spent on Supreme Court nominee battles, a Roe
reversal wouldn't change the country's total
number of abortion providers much. In fact,
a year after Roe is overturned, it would be
the rare woman who would notice any difference
in her life at all.
In the past year, as passionate people on both
sides have dug their Supreme Court battle trenches,
a few pro-choice organizations have attempted
to rally supporters with reports on which states
would ban abortion if Roe fell. Shortly before
the 2004 election, for instance, the Center
for Reproductive Rights announced that 21 states
were highly likely to ban abortion and nine
somewhat likely.
The problem with these calculations is that they
tend to include pre-Roe abortion bans still
on the books. Roe superseded these laws in
practice. In theory, some bans would immediately
become law if Roe were overturned. But this
theory implies that legislators and voters
in these states wouldn't be able to debate
and pass laws saying otherwise.
Given the split in U.S. politics, many would
do just that. Of the 21 states the Center for
Reproductive Rights claims are most likely
to ban abortion after Roe, seven have Democratic
governors. These governors would not be able
to preside over new post-Roe abortion bans
without risking a party revolt. Of the other
14 states, one (Rhode Island) votes consistently
Democratic in presidential races. Though not
all Democrats support abortion, it's unlikely
that the 60% of Rhode Island voters who chose
Sen. John Kerry last fall would be inspired
to support a ban.
Another state, Ohio, is too much of a political
tossup to count in the ban camp. Colorado might
vote "red," but the state's recent
election of a Democratic senator and new Democratic
majorities in its statehouse implies that the
politics are pretty split.
That leaves us with 11 states. According to data
from The Alan Guttmacher Institute, these states
had 122 abortion providers in 2000. That's
less than 7% of the 1,819 abortion providers
-- a fluid number, to be sure -- in the USA.
Most of those 122 providers (65) are in Texas.
If pro-choice forces can hold on to Texas (not
unlikely, given the feisty Democratic minority's
tendency to flee to Oklahoma to deny the Legislature
a quorum when its members are miffed) we're
down to 57 providers. If the Democrats controlling
the Alabama and Arkansas legislatures decided
to act like Democrats, not Dixiecrats, that
total could fall to 36. Spread across eight
vast states, that's low enough to be useless
to an average woman seeking an abortion.
In Mississippi, Kentucky and the Dakotas, 98%
of counties have no abortion providers; in
Missouri and Nebraska, 97% lack them. In these
Roe-unfriendly states, women already have to
travel hours to obtain abortions; in a post-Roe
world of crossing state lines, that story wouldn't
change.
Even if all three of the only "somewhat
likely" states with Republican governors,
legislatures and voting tendencies (Indiana,
Idaho and Georgia) banned abortion, that would
affect just 48 providers. In a "worst-case
scenario" (for pro-choice types) that
included a Texas ban, overturning Roe would
affect a maximum of 170 providers, less than
10% of the U.S. total.
What are they fighting for?
In their zeal to fight over the Supreme Court,
though, neither side of the abortion debate
has absorbed these numbers. Few pro-life groups
realize they've fought a 30-year battle to
put just a handful of doctors out of business.
Pro-choice forces haven't grasped that the
millions they'll spend lobbying to block Bush's
nominees could tip a lot of legislative races
in places such as Kentucky and Texas. Or, for
that matter, build a lot of clinics near the
borders of states likely to enact or keep abortion
bans.
Instead, over the next few years, the two sides
will fight the political equivalent of World
War I trench warfare -- bloody contests over
6 inches of turf. Millions will be spent. Nominees
will suffer the same "Borking" fate
as Judge Robert Bork did in the 1980s. The
filibuster might melt with the "nuclear
option."
Yet in the end, a post-Roe world will look a
lot like a Roe world -- except we'll like each
other a lot less, thanks to the battles.
New York City-based writer Laura Vanderkam is
a member of USA TODAY's board of contributors.
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