Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact:
PUBLIC RELATIONS DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
January
18, 2006
Supreme
Court Rules that Courts May Not Strike Down Abortion Laws in Their
Entirety When a Narrower Ruling Is Possible
Case
may lay the foundation to chip away at Roe v. Wade
Washington,
D.C. – Today, in a unanimous
opinion written by Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, the United
States Supreme Court in Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern
New England ruled that courts may not invalidate abortion laws
in their entirety when a narrower ruling is possible. Liberty Counsel
filed an amicus brief in the New Hampshire parental notification case.
The
lower courts had invalidated the entire law based on an assumption
that the law did not provide an exception to parental notification
when, in “some small percentage of cases, pregnant minors, like
adult women, need immediate abortions to avert serious and often irreversible
damage to their health.” Today’s decision reverses the
lower courts. The High Court sent the case back to the trial court
to “[e]ither enter an injunction prohibiting unconstitutional
applications or a holding that consistency with legislative intent
requires invalidating the statute in toto . . . . "
The
Court admitted that in 2000 it struck Nebraska’s partial birth
abortion statute in its entirety because it lacked a health exception.
Surprisingly, the Court seemed to acknowledge that had the parties
in Stenberg v. Carhart asked for a narrower ruling, it could
have upheld part of the law while striking down only the offending
sections. The implications of today’s ruling mean that lower
courts may not strike down abortion laws in their entirety when a
narrower ruling is possible. Although the Court did not address whether
it would permit pre-enforcement challenges to abortion laws, the decision
clearly will make striking down abortion legislation in its entirety
much more difficult.
While
the Court began its decision by stating that it was not “revisiting
our abortion precedents today,” the Court clearly stated that
parental involvement laws are permissible.
Mathew D. Staver, President and General Counsel of Liberty Counsel,
commented: “Although the Court’s ruling appears to be
subtle, the implications of the case mean that it will be far more
difficult for courts to strike down abortion legislation in its entirety
when a narrow ruling is permissible. Courts have frustrated legislators
by striking down abortion laws when only a narrow portion of the law
could have been striken. Although the time will come when the High
Court will revisit its abortion precedents, the Court’s decision
is a major victory for future abortion legislation. Untold numbers
of babies have lost their lives as a result of courts broadly striking
down laws based upon rare applications to unusual circumstances. In
the future, most of these laws will be allowed to operate to protect
life in 99% of the cases, while the 1% of questionable applications
will be stricken. I believe this case lays the foundation to chip
away at Roe v. Wade.”
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