Many
believe the recent nomination of Brett Kavanaugh as a Supreme Court
Justice to fill the seat vacated by Justice Kennedy represents an
extreme threat to a woman’s right to choose.
Planned
Parenthood distributed a press release titled, “Senate
Must Reject Supreme Court Nominee Brett Kavanaugh,”
essentially arguing that if affirmed, Kavanaugh would be the final
nail in the coffin for the ground-breaking Roe
v. Wade decision.
Reminding its members that Trump has already promised that he’d
only appoint anti-abortion justices to the Supreme Court, Dawn
Laguens, Executive Vice President, Planned Parenthood Federation of
America, said,
We
already know how Brett Kavanaugh would rule on Roe
v. Wade,
because the president told us so. We take Trump at his word that
Brett Kavanaugh would overturn Roe v. Wade and get rid of the
Affordable Care Act. The balance of the Supreme Court is at stake —
we cannot allow it to be tilted against the constitutional right to
access abortion.
By
taking Donald Trump at his word, Planned Parenthood is urging its
followers to oppose the confirmation of Kavanaugh. Taking this to its
logical conclusion — every Trump nominee should be deemed a
threat to a woman’s right to choose and should therefore be
opposed. This would have to be covered in a future piece. For now,
let’s just stick to Kavanaugh.
So
what do we really know about Kavanaugh’s stand on this issue?
Not much.
Unfortunately,
at this point, there is no way to say with any certainty how
Kavanaugh would rule on this issue because he doesn’t have a
track record to review. Some on the right are actually concerned that
Kavanaugh might not be anti-abortion enough. In a piece published by
Vox, many conservatives
expressed disappointment
in the selection of Kavanaugh.
Tim
Wildmon, president of the ultra conservative organization, American
Family Association, was quoted in the Vox piece saying, “Judge
Kavanaugh’s reasoning on religious liberty, Obamacare and
issues concerning life have proven to be of major concern. For these
and other reasons, we are calling on citizens to urge their senators
to firmly oppose the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh as a Justice on
the United States Supreme Court.”
Reportedly,
Vice President Mike Pence, once argued that the judge lacked the
“backbone” to overturn Roe.
However,
what causes concern for the left is a recent case, Garza
v. Hargan.
In Garza
v. Hargan,
a 17-year-old undocumented female entered the United States crossing
the boarder into Texas. Shortly after her arrival and detention (she
is referred to as Jane Doe in all documents to protect her identity),
Jane Doe discovered she was pregnant.
In
Texas, a minor seeking to have an abortion must have the permission
of her parents or have a judicial waiver issued by the court. Jane
Doe did not want her family to know about the abortion. She
successfully obtained a judicial waiver. At issue in the Garza
case was not whether Jane Doe had a legal right to terminate her
pregnancy—at issue was whether she would be allowed to leave
the facility where she was detained in an expeditious fashion.
In
this case, after Jane Doe successfully jumped through all the legal
hoops and successfully obtained the judicial waiver granting her the
right to make her own decision about whether to give birth or
terminate her pregnancy, and then after deciding that she wanted to
terminate her pregnancy, the court then refused to order Eric D.
Hargan, Acting Secretary, Health and Human Services, to allow Jane to
be transported to a location where the abortion would be performed.
The
attorneys in this case asserted that the defendants, Eric D. Hargan
et al., would not transport Jane Doe for the abortion, nor would the
defendants allow anyone else to do so. In essence, Jane Doe’s
attorneys were arguing that she was being held hostage. Finding that
Hargan imposed an undue burden on Jane Doe, which was preventing her
from accessing an abortion facility in an expeditious manner, a
federal judge ordered her released. Jane Doe was then able to get an
abortion the next day.
Brett
Kavanaugh was one of the judges on the bench when that case was
heard. He didn’t agree with the judges’ final ruling. In
his dissent, he argued that the court should not have ordered her
release when it did. He felt her interest was best served if the
court had taken more time—waited another week or so while they
looked for a sponsor. You can read the full court decision along with
Kavanaugh’s
dissent here.
(Ironically, Obama’s nominee to fill the vacancy on the Supreme
Court left by Antonin Scalia’s death – Chief Judge
Merrick
Garland
presided over Garza v. Hargan.)
What
could easily get lost in the reading as you navigate around the
legalese is Kavanaugh’s motivation for arguing that:
the
young woman be held and thus prevented from having an abortion for
more than a week longer,
it
is in her best interest that she be held; and
that
the majority decision amounted to abortion on demand.
I’ve
read it several times and his argument doesn’t hold water. The
court had evidence which the government’s attorneys never
denied that delaying the termination of the pregnancy magnified the
risks to Jane Doe’s health and increased the practical barriers
to obtaining an abortion in Texas. Given that Kavanaugh knew that
time was not on the young woman’s side, it’s hard to
reconcile why he’d argue against releasing her with his
assertion that he thought it was in her best interest. It’s
just not believable.
So
while there isn’t a hefty track record on which to analyze
Kavanaugh’s position on abortion, his attempt to cloak his real
intention for allowing HHS to continue to hold Jane Doe and thus
prevent her from terminating her pregnancy is both telling and
troubling.
A
colleague and frequent editorial contributor to the LA Progressive,
Charles
D. Hayes,
offers some insight into what might be motivating Kavanaugh:
The
antiabortion movement in this country for the most part, is not about
the welfare of unborn children. It never has been. It is instead, a
defensive stance to protect a medieval worldview, wedded to a
Biblical misogynistic belief about the roles of women, that when
disregarded and disrespected by the public, at large, calls the whole
mythic belief system into question, and thus, it represents a
conscious, but mostly an unconscious mortal threat.
All
you must do to verify this observation is to take a big-picture view
of what most of these zealots really believe, and care about, and if
you don’t think they would nuke nonbelievers and their children
who get in their way, you can’t be paying attention. It’s
not about lost souls, it’s a deep-seated sense of existential
insecurity because their worldview is threatened which means they
perceive that their identity as a group and as an individual is under
siege.
These
folks simply can’t abide that the rest of the world is going
about their business, as if what they believe isn’t worthy of
genuflection. And for a significant number of them, it’s not
even a belief thing so much as an identity posture as in—my
group says this issue is important, so I’m on board.
Again, all you must do is take a close look at what they really care
about, and this becomes crystal clear.
Now,
a deity that wouldn’t address the lost souls issue (should
souls exist) couldn’t be considered good—and a deity that
couldn’t address the moral dilemma it presents, couldn’t
be God. The GOP uses this topic for the blind obedience it inspires
and little else. And for sure we know this to be true, because they
have proven over and over that the health and welfare of children is
not on their priority list—born or unborn.
In
my opinion, Charles’ explanation is a lot more compelling than
anything written in Kavanaugh’s dissent. Not unlike Kavanaugh,
the anti-abortion movement hasn’t demonstrated that it is even
remotely interested in the welfare of the women whose rights they
seek to thwart or their unborn children. The same governmental
agency Kavanaugh argued was seeking to find the best outcome for Jane
Doe is the very agency that today can’t reunite toddlers with
their parents because they separated them without any plan for
reunification and now can’t find which parents belong to which
children or can’t find the parents at all.
Looks
like we’re all in for a long bumpy ride. This situation gets
more sickening every day.
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