National News





Bioethical News
Editorials and Op-Eds
International News
State News
Advertising
Reprint/Licensing
About LifeNews.com
Email News@LifeNews.com

Enter your email address
to receive news from LifeNews.com via email.

Do you prefer to receive
news daily or weekly?

Daily Weekly

Do you favor or
oppose abortion?

Favor Oppose


Click here to make a PayPal donation to LifeNews.com!

Senator in Samuel Alito Hearings Disproves "Super Precedent" on Abortion

by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
January 10, 2006

Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- Much has been made of the landmark Roe v. Wade decision as a "super precedent" that is now beyond the Supreme Court's ability to reverse because it has been upheld so many times. Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter has gone so far as to say that the high court has upheld the 1973 abortion case on 38 separate occasions.

However, during the hearings on Judge Samuel Alito's nomination to the high court, pro-life Ohio Republican Sen. Mike DeWine took time to prove that Roe is not a super precedent. He pointed out that most of the 38 cases following Roe that had to do with abortion did not include a decision to uphold the case.

The following is a transcript of Senator DeWine's comments:

During the confirmation hearing of Chief Justice Roberts, Chairman Specter showed us a chart stating that the Supreme Court had the opportunity to overrule Roe v. Wade in 38 cases. Because of this, the chairman suggested that Roe was not only a super-precedent, but super-duper-precedent.
The chairman has made the same argument at the hearing today. In fact, he brought the chart out again today.

Now, Judge, just to show you that not all members of this panel are like-minded, I want to tell you that I disagree. To me, Roe is not super-precedent. I believe Roe is precedent, but I don't believe it's super-duper-precedent, nor super-precedent.

First, although the court has applied Roe in 38 cases, it has not directly taken up the issue of whether to overrule Roe in every one of those cases.

In fact, out of those 38 cases, I've only found four in which the court directly addressed the status of Roe as binding precedent.

In Webster, the court asked whether Roe should be reaffirmed but ultimately avoided the issue.

In three cases, City of Akron, Thornburgh and Casey, the court did reaffirm Roe.

DEWINE: But the last of these, Casey, did so in a way that hardly left Roe on firm footing. In fact, Casey altered Roe by eliminating the strict scrutiny standard of review and replacing it with a lesser, undue burden tests. The result has been many restrictions on abortion have been upheld.

Second, just because Roe has been applied and reaffirmed does not make it a special form of precedent. Many other cases have been applied for decades before eventually being overruled.

For example, Plessy v. Ferguson, the case establishing the principle of separate but equal was upheld for 60 years before it was overruled, and certainly discredited today; Lochner v. New York, a case that greatly limited the power of the states to protect children and workers, was consistently applied for more than 30 years before it was overruled. And Swift v. Tyson, the case establishing the doctrine of federal common law, was a bedrock principle of American law repeatedly applied and upheld for nearly 100 years before it, too, was struck down.

Thus the mere fact that Roe has been upheld for more than 30 years does not mean that it's entitled to special deference.

Third, from the start, Roe has been criticized by lawyers, scholars and judges, whether Democrats or Republicans. And to date, it does remain controversial.

Fourth, much has happened over the last 30 years to undermine the soundness of Roe.

Senator Brownback has mentioned how the facts of Roe have changed. We now know that the plaintiff in Roe based her case on false statements and that she wants the case overturned.

We also know much about the life of babies in utero that we did not know 30 years ago.

We even know something about the internal deliberations of the justices who decided Roe. In an internal Supreme Court memo, Justice Harry Blackmun, the author of Roe, acknowledged that the trimester framework established in his opinion was, and I quote, "arbitrary."

DEWINE: And Justice Lewis Powell said that he could not find a right to an abortion within the Constitution and decided instead to rely on his gut.

Finally, whatever the term super-precedent means, I do not think that it describes Roe. In an article by William Landis and Richard Posner, super-precedent was defined this way: "It is a" -- and I quote -- "precedent that is so effective in defining the requirements of the law that it prevents legal decisions arising in the first place or, if they do arise, it induces them to be settled without litigation," end of quote.

In other words, super-precedent is precedent that is so firmly entrenched in our legal system that people simply don't question it.

Marbury v. Madison, the case establishing the power of judicial review, is super-precedent. It's so well-settled that litigants do not challenge it in court. In fact, it is one of the fundamental assumptions upon which our constitutional system is built.

Roe is hardly Marbury. Is Roe Supreme Court precedent? Certainly. But in my view, it is not super-precedent -- is not super- duper-precedent or even super-precedent. It is precedent. Nothing more.


 

 

 

Comments or questions? Email us at news@lifenews.com.
Copyright © 2003-2005 LifeNews.com. All rights reserved.
For information on reprinting and licensing click here.