My views on this matter are unchanged from those I
set forth in my separate opinions in Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S.
490, 532 (1989) (opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment), and Ohio v. Akron
Center for Reproductive Health, 497 U.S. 502, 520 (1990) (Akron II) (concurring opinion).
The States may, if they wish, permit abortion on demand, but the Constitution does not
require them to do so. The permissibility of abortion, and the limitations upon it, are to
be resolved like most important questions in our democracy: by citizens trying to persuade
one another and then voting. As the Court acknowledges, "where reasonable people
disagree, the government can adopt one position or the other." Ante, at 851.
The Court is correct in adding the qualification that this "assumes a state of
affairs in which the choice does not intrude upon a protected liberty," ibid.,
- but the crucial part of that qualification [505 U.S. 833, 980] is the penultimate word.
A State's choice between two positions on which reasonable people can disagree is
constitutional even when (as is often the case) it intrudes upon a "liberty" in
the absolute sense. Laws against bigamy, for example - with which entire societies of
reasonable people disagree - intrude upon men and women's liberty to marry and live with
one another. But bigamy happens not to be a liberty specially "protected" by the
Constitution.
That is, quite simply, the issue in this case: not whether the power
of a woman to abort her unborn child is a "liberty" in the absolute sense; or
even whether it is a liberty of great importance to many women. Of course it is both. The
issue is whether it is a liberty protected by the Constitution of the United States. I am
sure it is not. I reach that conclusion not because of anything so exalted as my views
concerning the "concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery
of human life." Ibid. Rather, I reach it for the same reason I reach the
conclusion that bigamy is not constitutionally protected - because of two simple facts:
(1) the Constitution says absolutely nothing about it, and (2) the longstanding traditions
of American society have permitted it to be legally proscribed. [Fn1] Akron II, supra,
at 520 (SCALIA, J., concurring). [505 U.S. 833, 981]
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 1] The Court's suggestion, ante, at 847-848, that
adherence to tradition would require us to uphold laws against interracial marriage is
entirely wrong. Any tradition in that case was contradicted by a text--an Equal
Protection Clause that explicitly establishes racial equality as a constitutional value.
See Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1, 9 (1967) ("In the case at bar, . . . we deal with
statutes containing racial classifications, and the fact of equal application does not
immunize the statute from the very heavy burden of justification which the Fourteenth
Amendment has traditionally required of state statutes drawn according to race"); see
also id., at 13 (Stewart, J., concurring in judgment). The enterprise launched in
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), by contrast, sought to establish--in the teeth of
a clear, contrary tradition - a value found nowhere in the constitutional text.
==========End Footnotes==========
The Court destroys the proposition, evidently meant to represent my
position, that "liberty" includes only those practices, defined at the most
specific level, that were protected against government interference by other rules of law
when the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, ante, at 847 (citing Michael H. v.
Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 127, n. 6 (1989) (opinion of SCALIA, J.). That is not, however,
what Michael H. says; it merely observes that, in defining "liberty," we may not
disregard a specific, "relevant tradition protecting, or denying protection to, the
asserted right," Ibid. But the Court does not wish to be fettered by any such
limitations on its preferences. The Court's statement that it is "tempting" to
acknowledge the authoritativeness of tradition in order to "cur[b] the discretion of
federal judges," ante, at 847, is, of course, rhetoric rather than reality; no
government official is "tempted" to place restraints upon his own freedom of
action, which is why Lord Acton did not say "Power tends to purify." The Court's
temptation is in the quite opposite and more natural direction - towards systematically
eliminating checks upon its own power; and it succumbs.
Beyond that brief summary of the essence of my position, I will not
swell the United States Reports with repetition of what I have said before; and applying
the rational basis test, I would uphold the Pennsylvania statute in its entirety. I must,
however, respond to a few of the more outrageous arguments in today's opinion, which it is
beyond human nature to leave unanswered. I shall discuss each of them under a quotation
from the Court's opinion to which they pertain.
"The inescapable fact is that adjudication of substantive
due process claims may call upon the Court, [505 U.S. 833, 982] in interpreting the
Constitution, to exercise that same capacity which, by tradition, courts always have
exercised: reasoned judgment." Ante, at 849.
Assuming that the question before us is to be resolved at such a
level of philosophical abstraction, in such isolation from the traditions of American
society, as by simply applying "reasoned judgment," I do not see how that could
possibly have produced the answer the Court arrived at in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113
(1973). Today's opinion describes the methodology of Roe, quite accurately, as weighing
against the woman's interest the State's "`important and legitimate interest in
protecting the potentiality of human life.'" Ante, at 871 (quoting Roe,
supra, at 162). But "reasoned judgment" does not begin by begging the
question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State
is protecting is the mere "potentiality of human life." See, e.g., Roe, supra,
at 162; Planned Parenthood of Central Mo. v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52, 61 (1976); Colautti v.
Franklin, 439 U.S. 379, 386 (1979); Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, Inc.,
462 U.S. 416, 428 (1983) (Akron I); Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo., Inc. v.
Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476, 482 (1983). The whole argument of abortion opponents is that what
the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.
Thus, whatever answer Roe came up with after conducting its "balancing" is bound
to be wrong, unless it is correct that the human fetus is in some critical sense merely
potentially human. There is, of course, no way to determine that as a legal matter; it is,
in fact, a value judgment. Some societies have considered newborn children not yet human,
or the incompetent elderly no longer so.
The authors of the joint opinion, of course, do not squarely contend
that Roe v. Wade was a correct application of "reasoned judgment"; merely
that it must be followed, because of stare decisis. Ante, at 853, 861, 871.
But in their exhaustive discussion of all the factors that go into the determination [505
U.S. 833, 983] of when stare decisis should be observed and when disregarded, they
never mention "how wrong was the decision on its face?" Surely, if "[t]he
Court's power lies . . . in its legitimacy, a product of substance and perception,"
ante, at 865, the "substance" part of the equation demands that plain error
be acknowledged and eliminated. Roe was plainly wrong - even on the Court's methodology of
"reasoned judgment," and even more so (of course) if the proper criteria of text
and tradition are applied.
The emptiness of the "reasoned judgment" that produced Roe
is displayed in plain view by the fact that, after more than 19 years of effort by some of
the brightest (and most determined) legal minds in the country, after more than 10 cases
upholding abortion rights in this Court, and after dozens upon dozens of amicus briefs
submitted in this and other cases, the best the Court can do to explain how it is that the
word "liberty" must be thought to include the right to destroy human fetuses is
to rattle off a collection of adjectives that simply decorate a value judgment and conceal
a political choice. The right to abort, we are told, inheres in "liberty"
because it is among "a person's most basic decisions," ante, at 849; it
involves a "most intimate and personal choic[e]," ante, at 851; it is
"central to personal dignity and autonomy," ibid.; it "originate[s]
within the zone of conscience and belief," ante, at 852 it is "too
intimate and personal" for state interference, ibid.; it reflects
"intimate views" of a "deep, personal character," ante, at 853;
it involves "intimate relationships" and notions of "personal autonomy and
bodily integrity," ante, at 857; and it concerns a particularly
"`important decisio[n],'" ante, at 859 (citation omitted). [Fn2] But it
is [505 U.S. 833, 984] obvious to anyone applying "reasoned judgment" that the
same adjectives can be applied to many forms of conduct that this Court (including one of
the Justices in today's majority, see Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 186 (1986)) has held
are not entitled to constitutional protection - because, like abortion, they are forms of
conduct that have long been criminalized in American society. Those adjectives might be
applied, for example, to homosexual sodomy, polygamy, adult incest, and suicide, all of
which are equally "intimate" and "deep[ly] personal" decisions
involving "personal autonomy and bodily integrity," and all of which can
constitutionally be proscribed because it is our unquestionable constitutional tradition
that they are proscribable. It is not reasoned judgment that supports the Court's
decision; only personal predilection. Justice Curtis' warning is as timely today as it was
135 years ago:
"[W]hen a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according
to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the
theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer
a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men, who for the time being have
power to declare what the Constitution is, according to their own views of what it ought
to mean." Dred Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393, 621 (1857) (dissenting opinion).
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 2] JUSTICE BLACKMUN's parade of adjectives is similarly empty:
abortion is among "`the most intimate and personal choices,'" ante, at
923; it is a matter "central to personal dignity and autonomy," ibid.;
and it involves "personal decisions that profoundly affect bodily integrity,
identity, and destiny," ante, at 927. JUSTICE STEVENS is not much less
conclusory: the decision to choose abortion is a matter of "the highest privacy and
the [505 U.S. 833, 984] most personal nature," ante, at 915; it involves a
"`difficult choice having serious and personal consequences of major importance to [a
woman's] future,'" ibid.; the authority to make this "traumatic and yet
empowering decisio[n]" is "an element of basic human dignity," ibid.;
and it is "nothing less than a matter of conscience," ibid.
==========End Footnotes==========
Liberty finds no refuge in a jurisprudence of doubt. Ante,
at 844.
One might have feared to encounter this august and sonorous phrase
in an opinion defending the real Roe v. Wade, rather than the revised version fabricated
today by the authors [505 U.S. 833, 985] of the joint opinion. The shortcomings of Roe did
not include lack of clarity: virtually all regulation of abortion before the third
trimester was invalid. But to come across this phrase in the joint opinion - which calls
upon federal district judges to apply an "undue burden" standard as doubtful in
application as it is unprincipled in origin - is really more than one should have to bear.
The joint opinion frankly concedes that the amorphous concept of
"undue burden" has been inconsistently applied by the Members of this Court in
the few brief years since that "test" was first explicitly propounded by JUSTICE
O'CONNOR in her dissent in Akron I, See 462 U.S. 416 (1983). See ante at 876. [Fn3]
Because the three Justices now wish to "set forth a standard of general
application," the joint opinion announces that "it is important to clarify what
is meant by an undue burden." Ibid. I certainly agree with that, but I do not
agree that the joint opinion succeeds in the announced endeavor. To the contrary, its
efforts at clarification [505 U.S. 833, 986] make clear only that the standard is
inherently manipulable, and will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 3] The joint opinion is clearly wrong in asserting, ante,
at 874, that "the Court's early abortion cases adhered to" he "undue
burden" standard. The passing use of that phrase in JUSTICE BLACKMUN's opinion for
the Court in Bellotti v. Baird, 428 U.S. 132, 147 (1976) (Bellotti I), was not by way of
setting forth the standard of unconstitutionality, as JUSTICE O'CONNOR's later
opinions did, but by way of expressing the conclusion of unconstitutionality.
Justice Powell for a time appeared to employ a variant of "undue burden"
analysis in several nonmajority opinions, see, e.g., Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622, 647
(1979) (Bellotti II); Carey v. Population Services International, 431 U.S. 678, 705 (1977)
(opinion concurring in part and concurring in judgment), but he too ultimately rejected
that standard in his opinion for the Court in Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive
Health, Inc., 462 U.S. 416, 420, n. 1 (1983) (Akron I). The joint opinion's reliance on
Maher v. Roe, 432 U.S. 464, 473 (1977), and Harris v. McRae, 448 U.S. 297, 314 (1980), is
entirely misplaced, since those cases did not involve regulation of abortion, but mere
refusal to fund it. In any event, JUSTICE O'CONNOR's earlier formulations have apparently
now proved unsatisfactory to the three Justices, who - in the name of stare decisis,
no less - today find it necessary to devise an entirely new version of "undue
burden" analysis. See ante, at 877-879.
==========End Footnotes==========
The joint opinion explains that a state regulation imposes an
"undue burden" if it "has the purpose or effect of placing a substantial
obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus." Ante,
at 877; see also ante, at 877-879. An obstacle is "substantial," we are
told, if it is "calculated[,] [not] to inform the woman's free choice, [but to]
hinder it." Ante, at 877. [Fn4] This latter statement cannot [505 U.S. 833,
987] possibly mean what it says. Any regulation of abortion that is intended to advance
what the joint opinion concedes is the State's "substantial" interest in
protecting unborn life will be "calculated [to] hinder" a decision to have an
abortion. It thus seems more accurate to say that the joint opinion would uphold abortion
regulations only if they do not unduly hinder the woman's decision. That, of
course, brings us right back to square one: defining an "undue burden" as an
"undue hindrance" (or a "substantial obstacle") hardly
"clarifies" the test. Consciously or not, the joint opinion's verbal shell game
will conceal raw judicial policy choices concerning what is "appropriate"
abortion legislation.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 4] The joint opinion further asserts that a law imposing an
undue burden on abortion decisions is not a "permissible" means of serving
"legitimate" state interests. Ante, at 877. This description of the undue
burden standard in terms more commonly associated with the rational basis test will come
as a surprise even to those who have followed closely our wanderings in this forsaken
wilderness. See, e.g., Akron I, supra, at 463 (O'CONNOR, J., dissenting) ("The
`undue burden' . . . represents the required threshold inquiry that must be conducted
before this Court can require a State to justify its legislative actions under the
exacting `compelling state interest' standard"); see also Hodgson v. Minnesota, 497
U.S. 417, 458-460 (1990) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment in
part); Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 476 U.S. 747,
828 (1986) (O'CONNOR, J., dissenting). This confusing equation of the two standards is
apparently designed to explain how one of the Justices who joined the plurality opinion in
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S. 490 (1989), which adopted the
rational-basis test, could join an opinion expressly adopting the undue burden test. See
id., at 520 (rejecting the view that abortion is a "fundamental right,"
instead inquiring whether a law regulating the woman's "liberty interest" in
abortion is "reasonably designed" to further "legitimate" state ends).
The same motive also apparently underlies the joint opinion's erroneous citation of the
plurality opinion in Ohio v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 497 U.S. 502, 506
(1990) (Akron II) (opinion of KENNEDY, J.), as applying the undue burden test. See ante,
at 876 (using this citation to support the proposition that "two of us" - i.e.,
two of the authors of the joint opinion - have previously applied this test). In fact,
Akron II does not mention the undue burden standard until the conclusion of the opinion,
when it states that the statute at issue "does not impose an undue, or otherwise
unconstitutional, burden." 497 U.S., at 519 (emphasis added). I fail to see how
anyone can think that saying a statute does not impose an unconstitutional burden under any
standard, including [505 U.S. 833, 987] the undue burden test, amounts to adopting the
undue burden test as the exclusive standard. The Court's citation of Hodgson as
reflecting JUSTICE KENNEDY's and JUSTICE O'CONNOR's "shared premises," ante
at 878, is similarly inexplicable, since the word "undue" was never even used in
the former's opinion in that case. I joined JUSTICE KENNEDY's opinions in both Hodgson and
Akron II; I should be grateful, I suppose, that the joint opinion does not claim that I,
too, have adopted the undue burden test.
==========End Footnotes==========
The ultimately standardless nature of the "undue burden"
inquiry is a reflection of the underlying fact that the concept has no principled or
coherent legal basis. As THE CHIEF JUSTICE points out, Roe's strict scrutiny standard
"at least had a recognized basis in constitutional law at the time Roe was
decided," ante, at 964, while [t]he same cannot be said for the "undue
burden" standard, which is created largely out of whole cloth by the authors of the
joint opinion. ibid. The joint opinion is flatly wrong in asserting that "our
jurisprudence relating to all liberties save perhaps abortion has recognized" the
permissibility of laws that do not impose an "undue burden." Ante, at
873. It argues that the abortion right is similar to other rights in that a law not
designed to strike at the right itself, [but which] has the incidental effect of making it
more difficult or more expensive to [exercise the right,] is not invalid. Ante, at
874. I agree, indeed I have [505 U.S. 833, 988] forcefully urged, that a law of general
applicability which places only an incidental burden on a fundamental right does not
infringe that right, see R.A.V. v. St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, (1992); Employment Div., Dept.
of Human Resources of Ore. v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872, 878-882 (1990), but that principle does
not establish the quite different (and quite dangerous) proposition that a law which directly
regulates a fundamental right will not be found to violate the Constitution unless it
imposes an "undue burden." It is that, of course, which is at issue here:
Pennsylvania has consciously and directly regulated conduct that our cases have
held is constitutionally protected. The appropriate analogy, therefore, is that of a state
law requiring purchasers of religious books to endure a 24-hour waiting period, or to pay
a nominal additional tax of 1¢. The joint opinion cannot possibly be correct in
suggesting that we would uphold such legislation on the ground that it does not impose a
"substantial obstacle" to the exercise of First Amendment rights. The
"undue burden" standard is not at all the generally applicable principle the
joint opinion pretends it to be; rather, it is a unique concept created specially for this
case, to preserve some judicial foothold in this ill-gotten territory. In claiming
otherwise, the three Justices show their willingness to place all constitutional rights at
risk in an effort to preserve what they deem the "central holding in Roe."
Ante, at 873.
The rootless nature of the "undue burden" standard, a
phrase plucked out of context from our earlier abortion decisions, see n. 3, supra,
is further reflected in the fact that the joint opinion finds it necessary expressly to
repudiate the more narrow formulations used in JUSTICE O'CONNOR's earlier opinions.
Ante, at 876-877. Those opinions stated that a statute imposes an "undue
burden" if it imposes "absolute obstacles or severe limitations on
the abortion decision," Akron I, 462 U.S., at 464 (dissenting opinion) (emphasis
added); see also Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 476
U.S. 747, 828 (1986) (dissenting [505 U.S. 833, 989] opinion). Those strong adjectives are
conspicuously missing from the joint opinion, whose authors have, for some unexplained
reason, now determined that a burden is "undue" if it merely imposes a
"substantial" obstacle to abortion decisions. See, e.g., ante, at 895,
901. JUSTICE O'CONNOR has also abandoned (again without explanation) the view she
expressed in Planned Parenthood Assn. of Kansas City, Mo., Inc. v. Ashcroft, 462 U.S. 476
(1983) (dissenting opinion), that a medical regulation which imposes an "undue
burden" could nevertheless be upheld if it "reasonably relate[s] to the
preservation and protection of maternal health," id., at 505 (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted). In today's version, even health measures will be upheld
only "if they do not constitute an undue burden," ante, at 878
(emphasis added). Gone too is JUSTICE O'CONNOR's statement that "the State possesses compelling
interests in the protection of potential human life . . . throughout pregnancy,"
Akron I, supra, at 461 (dissenting opinion) (emphasis added); see also Ashcroft,
supra, at 505 (O'CONNOR, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in part);
Thornburgh, supra, at 828 (O'CONNOR, J., dissenting); instead, the State's interest
in unborn human life is stealthily downgraded to a merely "substantial" or
"profound" interest, ante, at 876, 878. (That had to be done, of course,
since designating the interest as "compelling" throughout pregnancy would have
been, shall we say, a "substantial obstacle" to the joint opinion's determined
effort to reaffirm what it views as the "central holding" of Roe. See Akron I,
462 U.S., at 420, n. 1). And "viability" is no longer the "arbitrary"
dividing line previously decried by JUSTICE O'CONNOR in Akron I, id., at 461; the
Court now announces that "the attainment of viability may continue to serve as the
critical fact," ante, at 860. [Fn5] It is difficult to [505 U.S. 833, 990]
maintain the illusion that we are interpreting a Constitution, rather than inventing one,
when we amend its provisions so breezily.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 5] Of course, JUSTICE O'CONNOR was correct in her former view.
The arbitrariness of the viability line is confirmed by the Court's inability to offer any
justification for it beyond the conclusory assertion that it is only at that point that
the unborn child's life "can in reason and all fairness" [505 U.S. 833, 990] be
thought to override the interests of the mother. Ante, at 870. Precisely why is it
that, at the magical second when machines currently in use (though not necessarily
available to the particular woman) are able to keep an unborn child alive apart from its
mother, the creature is suddenly able (under our Constitution) to be protected by law,
whereas, before that magical second, it was not? That makes no more sense than according
infants legal protection only after the point when they can feed themselves.
==========End Footnotes==========
Because the portion of the joint opinion adopting and describing the
undue burden test provides no more useful guidance than the empty phrases discussed above,
one must turn to 23 pages applying that standard to the present facts, for further
guidance. In evaluating Pennsylvania's abortion law, the joint opinion relies extensively
on the factual findings of the District Court, and repeatedly qualifies its conclusions by
noting that they are contingent upon the record developed in this case. Thus, the joint
opinion would uphold the 24-hour waiting period contained in the Pennsylvania statute's
informed consent provision, 18 Pa.Cons.Stat. § 3205 (1990), because "the record
evidence shows that, in the vast majority of cases, a 24-hour delay does not create any
appreciable health risk," ante, at 885. The three Justices therefore conclude
that, "on the record before us, . . . we are not convinced that the 24-hour waiting
period constitutes an undue burden." Ante, at 887. The requirement that a
doctor provide the information pertinent to informed consent would also be upheld because
there is no evidence on this record that [this requirement] would amount, in practical
terms, to a substantial obstacle to a woman seeking an abortion. Ante, at 884.
Similarly, the joint opinion would uphold the reporting requirements of the Act, §§
3207, 3214, because "there is no . . . showing on the record before us" that
these requirements constitute a "substantial obstacle" [505 U.S. 833, 991] to
abortion decisions. Ante, at 901. But, at the same time, the opinion pointedly
observes that these reporting requirements may increase the costs of abortions, and that
"at some point, [that fact] could become a substantial obstacle." Ibid.
Most significantly, the joint opinion's conclusion that the spousal notice requirement of
the Act, see § 3209, imposes an "undue burden" is based in large measure on the
District Court's "detailed findings of fact," which the joint opinion sets out
at great length, ante, at 888-891.
I do not, of course, have any objection to the notion that, in
applying legal principles, one should rely only upon the facts that are contained in the
record or that are properly subject to judicial notice. [Fn6] But what is remarkable about
the joint opinion's fact-intensive analysis is that it does not result in any measurable
clarification of the "undue burden" standard. Rather, the approach of the joint
opinion is, for the most part, simply to highlight certain facts in the record that
apparently strike the three Justices as particularly significant in establishing (or
refuting) the existence of an undue burden; after describing these facts, the opinion then
simply announces that the provision either does or does not impose a "substantial
obstacle" or an "undue burden." See, e.g., ante, at 880, 884-885,
887, 893-894, 895, 901. We do not know whether the same conclusions could have been
reached on a different record, or in what respects the record would have had to differ
before an opposite conclusion would have been [505 U.S. 833, 992] appropriate. The
inherently standardless nature of this inquiry invites the district judge to give effect
to his personal preferences about abortion. By finding and relying upon the right facts,
he can invalidate, it would seem, almost any abortion restriction that strikes him as
"undue"--subject, of course, to the possibility of being reversed by a Court of
Appeals or Supreme Court that is as unconstrained in reviewing his decision as he was in
making it.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 6] The joint opinion is not entirely faithful to this principle,
however. In approving the District Court's factual findings with respect to the spousal
notice provision, it relies extensively on nonrecord materials, and, in reliance upon
them, adds a number of factual conclusions of its own. Ante, at 891-893. Because
this additional fact-finding pertains to matters that surely are "subject to
reasonable dispute," Fed.Rule Evid. 201(b), the joint opinion must be operating on
the premise that these are "legislative," rather than "adjudicative,"
facts, see Rule 201(a). But if a court can find an undue burden simply by selectively
string-citing the right social science articles, I do not see the point of emphasizing or
requiring "detailed factual findings" in the District Court.
==========End Footnotes==========
To the extent I can discern any meaningful content in the
"undue burden" standard as applied in the joint opinion, it appears to be that a
State may not regulate abortion in such a way as to reduce significantly its incidence.
The joint opinion repeatedly emphasizes that an important factor in the "undue
burden" analysis is whether the regulation "prevent[s] a significant number of
women from obtaining an abortion," ante, at 893; whether a "significant
number of women . . . are likely to be deterred from procuring an abortion," ibid.;
and whether the regulation often "deters" women from seeking abortions, ante,
at 894. We are not told, however, what forms of "deterrence" are impermissible
or what degree of success in deterrence is too much to be tolerated. If, for example, a
State required a woman to read a pamphlet describing, with illustrations, the facts of
fetal development before she could obtain an abortion, the effect of such legislation
might be to "deter" a "significant number of women" from procuring
abortions, thereby seemingly allowing a district judge to invalidate it as an undue
burden. Thus, despite flowery rhetoric about the State's "substantial" and
"profound" interest in "potential human life," and criticism of Roe
for undervaluing that interest, the joint opinion permits the State to pursue that
interest only so long as it is not too successful. As JUSTICE BLACKMUN recognizes (with
evident hope), ante, at 926, the "undue burden" standard may ultimately
require the invalidation of each provision upheld today if it can be shown, on a better
record, that the State is too effectively "express[ing] a preference [505 U.S. 833,
993] for childbirth over abortion," ante, at 883. Reason finds no refuge in
this jurisprudence of confusion.
"While we appreciate the weight of the arguments . . . that
Roe should be overruled, the reservations any of us may have in reaffirming the central
holding of Roe are outweighed by the explication of individual liberty we have given
combined with the force of stare decisis. Ante, at 853.
The Court's reliance upon stare decisis can best be described
as contrived. It insists upon the necessity of adhering not to all of Roe, but only to
what it calls the "central holding." It seems to me that stare decisis
ought to be applied even to the doctrine of stare decisis, and I confess never to
have heard of this new, keep-what-you-want-and-throw-away-the-rest version. I wonder
whether, as applied to Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803), for example, the new
version of stare decisis would be satisfied if we allowed courts to review the
constitutionality of only those statutes that (like the one in Marbury) pertain to the
jurisdiction of the courts.
I am certainly not in a good position to dispute that the Court has
saved the "central holding" of Roe, since, to do that effectively, I would
have to know what the Court has saved, which in turn would require me to understand (as I
do not) what the "undue burden" test means. I must confess, however, that I have
always thought, and I think a lot of other people have always thought, that the arbitrary
trimester framework, which the Court today discards, was quite as central to Roe as the
arbitrary viability test, which the Court today retains. It seems particularly ungrateful
to carve the trimester framework out of the core of Roe, since its very rigidity (in sharp
contrast to the utter indeterminability of the "undue burden" test) is probably
the only reason the Court is able to say, in urging stare decisis, that Roe
"has in no sense proven `unworkable,'" ante, at 855. I suppose the [505
U.S. 833, 994] Court is entitled to call a "central holding" whatever it wants
to call a "central holding" - which is, come to think of it, perhaps one of the
difficulties with this modified version of stare decisis. I thought I might note,
however, that the following portions of Roe have not been saved:
* Under Roe, requiring that a woman seeking an abortion be provided
truthful information about abortion before giving informed written consent is
unconstitutional if the information is designed to influence her choice. Thornburgh, 476
U.S., at 759-765; Akron I, 462 U.S., at 442-445. Under the joint opinion's "undue
burden" regime (as applied today, at least) such a requirement is constitutional.
Ante, at 881-885.
* Under Roe, requiring that information be provided by a doctor,
rather than by nonphysician counselors, is unconstitutional. Akron I, supra, at
446-449. Under the "undue burden" regime (as applied today, at least) it is not.
Ante, at 884-885.
* Under Roe, requiring a 24-hour waiting period between the time the
woman gives her informed consent and the time of the abortion is unconstitutional. Akron
I, supra, at 449-451. Under the "undue burden" regime (as applied today,
at least) it is not. Ante, at 885-887.
* Under Roe, requiring detailed reports that include demographic
data about each woman who seeks an abortion and various information about each abortion is
unconstitutional. Thornburgh, supra, 476 U.S., at 765-768. Under the "undue
burden" regime (as applied today, at least) it generally is not. Ante at
900-901.
"Where, in the performance of its judicial duties, the Court
decides a case in such a way as to resolve the sort of intensely divisive controversy
reflected in Roe . . ., its decision has a dimension that the resolution of the normal
case does not carry. It is the dimension present whenever the Court's interpretation of
the Constitution calls the contending sides of a [505 U.S. 833, 995] national
controversy to end their national division by accepting a common mandate rooted in the
Constitution. Ante, at 866-867.
The Court's description of the place of Roe in the social history of
the United States is unrecognizable. Not only did Roe not, as the Court suggests, resolve
the deeply divisive issue of abortion; it did more than anything else to nourish it, by
elevating it to the national level, where it is infinitely more difficult to resolve.
National politics were not plagued by abortion protests, national abortion lobbying, or
abortion marches on Congress before Roe v. Wade was decided. Profound disagreement existed
among our citizens over the issue - as it does over other issues, such as the death
penalty - but that disagreement was being worked out at the state level. As with many
other issues, the division of sentiment within each State was not as closely balanced as
it was among the population of the Nation as a whole, meaning not only that more people
would be satisfied with the results of state-by-state resolution, but also that those
results would be more stable. Pre-Roe, moreover, political compromise was possible.
Roe's mandate for abortion on demand destroyed the compromises of
the past, rendered compromise impossible for the future, and required the entire issue to
be resolved uniformly, at the national level. At the same time, Roe created a vast new
class of abortion consumers and abortion proponents by eliminating the moral opprobrium
that had attached to the act. ("If the Constitution guarantees abortion, how
can it be bad?" - not an accurate line of thought, but a natural one.) Many favor all
of those developments, and it is not for me to say that they are wrong. But to portray Roe
as the statesmanlike "settlement" of a divisive issue, a jurisprudential Peace
of Westphalia that is worth preserving, is nothing less than Orwellian. Roe fanned into
life an issue that has inflamed our national politics in general, and has obscured with
its smoke the selection of Justices to this Court, [505 U.S. 833, 996] in particular, ever
since. And by keeping us in the abortion-umpiring business, it is the perpetuation of that
disruption, rather than of any Pax Roeana that the Court's new majority decrees.
"[T]o overrule under fire . . . would subvert the Court's
legitimacy. . . .
". . . To all those who will be . . . tested by following, the
Court implicitly undertakes to remain steadfast. . . . The promise of constancy, once
given, binds its maker for as long as the power to stand by the decision survives and . .
. the commitment [is not] obsolete. . . .
"[The American people's] belief in themselves as . . . a people
[who aspire to live according to the rule of law] is not readily separable from their
understanding of the Court invested with the authority to decide their constitutional
cases and speak before all others for their constitutional ideals. If the Court's
legitimacy should be undermined, then so would the country be in its very ability to see
itself through its constitutional ideals." Ante, at 867-868.
The Imperial Judiciary lives. It is instructive to compare this
Nietzschean vision of us unelected, life-tenured judges - leading a Volk who will be
"tested by following," and whose very "belief in themselves" is
mystically bound up in their "understanding" of a Court that "speak[s]
before all others for their constitutional ideals" - with the somewhat more modest
role envisioned for these lawyers by the Founders.
"The judiciary . . . has . . . no direction either of the
strength or of the wealth of the society, and can take no active resolution whatever. It
may truly be said to have neither Force nor Will, but merely judgment. . . ." The
Federalist No. 78, pp. 393-394 (G. Wills ed. 1982).
Or, again, to compare this ecstasy of a Supreme Court in which there
is, especially on controversial matters, no [505 U.S. 833, 997] shadow of change or hint
of alteration ("There is a limit to the amount of error that can plausibly be imputed
to prior Courts," ante, at 866), with the more democratic views of a more
humble man:
"[T]he candid citizen must confess that, if the policy of the
Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by
decisions of the Supreme Court, . . . the people will have ceased to be their own rulers,
having to that extent practically resigned their Government into the hands of that eminent
tribunal." A. Lincoln, First Inaugural Address (Mar. 4, 1861), reprinted in Inaugural
Addresses of the Presidents of the United States, S. Doc. No. 101-10, p. 139 (1989).
It is particularly difficult, in the circumstances of the present
decision, to sit still for the Court's lengthy lecture upon the virtues of
"constancy," ante, at 868, of "remain[ing] steadfast," ibid.,
and adhering to "principle," ante, passim. Among the five Justices
who purportedly adhere to Roe, at most three agree upon the principle that
constitutes adherence (the joint opinion's "undue burden" standard) - and that
principle is inconsistent with Roe. See 410 U.S., at 154-156. [Fn7] To make matters worse,
two of the three, in order thus to remain steadfast, had to abandon previously stated
positions. See n. 4, supra; see supra at 11-12. It is beyond me how the
Court expects these accommodations to be accepted as grounded truly in principle, not as
compromises with social and political pressures having, as such, no bearing on the
principled choices that the Court is obliged to make. Ante, at 865-866. The only
principle the Court "adheres" [505 U.S. 833, 998] to, it seems to me, is the
principle that the Court must be seen as standing by Roe. That is not a principle of law
(which is what I thought the Court was talking about), but a principle of Realpolitik--and
a wrong one, at that.
===========Begin Footnotes==========
[Fn 7] JUSTICE BLACKMUN's effort to preserve as much of Roe as
possible leads him to read the joint opinion as more "constan[t]" and
"steadfast" than can be believed. He contends that the joint opinion's
"undue burden" standard requires the application of strict scrutiny to "all
non-de minimis" abortion regulations, ante, at 926, but that could only
be true if a "substantial obstacle," ante, at 877 (joint opinion), were
the same thing as a non-de minimis obstacle - which it plainly is not.
==========End Footnotes==========
I cannot agree with, indeed I am appalled by, the Court's suggestion
that the decision whether to stand by an erroneous constitutional decision must be
strongly influenced--against overruling, no less--by the substantial and continuing
public opposition the decision has generated. The Court's judgment that any other course
would "subvert the Court's legitimacy" must be another consequence of reading
the error-filled history book that described the deeply divided country brought together
by Roe. In my history book, the Court was covered with dishonor and deprived of legitimacy
by Dred Scott v. Sandford, 19 How. 393 (1857), an erroneous (and widely opposed) opinion
that it did not abandon, rather than by West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, 300 U.S. 379
(1937), which produced the famous "switch in time" from the Court's erroneous
(and widely opposed) constitutional opposition to the social measures of the New Deal.
Both Dred Scott and one line of the cases resisting the New Deal rested upon the concept
of "substantive due process" that the Court praises and employs today. Indeed,
Dred Scott was very possibly the first application of substantive due process in the
Supreme Court, the original precedent for Lochner v. New York and Roe v. Wade. D. Currie,
The Constitution in the Supreme Court 271 (1985) (footnotes omitted).
But whether it would "subvert the Court's legitimacy" or
not, the notion that we would decide a case differently from the way we otherwise would
have in order to show that we can stand firm against public disapproval is frightening. It
is a bad enough idea, even in the head of someone like me, who believes that the text of
the Constitution, and our traditions, say what they say and there is no fiddling with
them. But when it is in the mind of a Court that believes the Constitution [505 U.S. 833,
999] has an evolving meaning, see ante, at 848; that the Ninth Amendment's
reference to "othe[r]" rights is not a disclaimer, but a charter for action,
ibid.; and that the function of this Court is to "speak before all others for
[the people's] constitutional ideals" unrestrained by meaningful text or tradition -
then the notion that the Court must adhere to a decision for as long as the decision faces
"great opposition" and the Court is "under fire" acquires a character
of almost czarist arrogance. We are offended by these marchers who descend upon us, every
year on the anniversary of Roe, to protest our saying that the Constitution requires what
our society has never thought the Constitution requires. These people who refuse to be
"tested by following" must be taught a lesson. We have no Cossacks, but at least
we can stubbornly refuse to abandon an erroneous opinion that we might otherwise change -
to show how little they intimidate us.
Of course, as THE CHIEF JUSTICE points out, we have been subjected
to what the Court calls "`political pressure'" by both sides of this
issue. Ante, at 963. Maybe today's decision not to overrule Roe will be seen
as buckling to pressure from that direction. Instead of engaging in the hopeless
task of predicting public perception - a job not for lawyers but for political campaign
managers - the Justices should do what is legally right by asking two questions:
(1) Was Roe correctly decided? (2) Has Roe succeeded in producing a settled body of law?
If the answer to both questions is no, Roe should undoubtedly be overruled.
In truth, I am as distressed as the Court is - and expressed my
distress several years ago, see Webster, 492 U.S., at 535 - about the "political
pressure" directed to the Court: the marches, the mail, the protests aimed at
inducing us to change our opinions. How upsetting it is, that so many of our citizens
(good people, not lawless ones, on both sides of this abortion issue, and on various sides
of other issues as well) think that we Justices should properly take into account [505
U.S. 833, 1000] their views, as though we were engaged not in ascertaining an objective
law, but in determining some kind of social consensus. The Court would profit, I think,
from giving less attention to the fact of this distressing phenomenon, and more
attention to the cause of it. That cause permeates today's opinion: a new mode of
constitutional adjudication that relies not upon text and traditional practice to
determine the law, but upon what the Court calls "reasoned judgment," ante,
at 849, which turns out to be nothing but philosophical predilection and moral intuition.
All manner of "liberties," the Court tells us, inhere in the Constitution, and
are enforceable by this Court - not just those mentioned in the text or established in the
traditions of our society. Ante, at 847-849. Why even the Ninth Amendment - which
says only that "[t]he enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not
be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people" - is, despite our
contrary understanding for almost 200 years, a literally boundless source of additional,
unnamed, unhinted-at "rights," definable and enforceable by us, through
"reasoned judgment." Ante, at 848-849.
What makes all this relevant to the bothersome application of
"political pressure" against the Court are the twin facts that the American
people love democracy and the American people are not fools. As long as this Court thought
(and the people thought) that we Justices were doing essentially lawyers' work up here -
reading text and discerning our society's traditional understanding of that text - the
public pretty much left us alone. Texts and traditions are facts to study, not convictions
to demonstrate about. But if in reality, our process of constitutional adjudication
consists primarily of making value judgments; if we can ignore a long and clear
tradition clarifying an ambiguous text, as we did, for example, five days ago in declaring
unconstitutional invocations and benedictions at public high school graduation ceremonies,
Lee v. Weisman, 505 U.S. 577 (1992); if, as I say, our pronouncement of constitutional law
rests primarily on value [505 U.S. 833, 1001] judgments, then a free and intelligent
people's attitude towards us can be expected to be (ought to be) quite different.
The people know that their value judgments are quite as good as those taught in any law
school - maybe better. If, indeed, the "liberties" protected by the Constitution
are, as the Court says, undefined and unbounded, then the people should
demonstrate, to protest that we do not implement their values instead of ours.
Not only that, but the confirmation hearings for new Justices should deteriorate
into question-and-answer sessions in which Senators go through a list of their
constituents' most favored and most disfavored alleged constitutional rights, and seek the
nominee's commitment to support or oppose them. Value judgments, after all, should be
voted on, not dictated; and if our Constitution has somehow accidentally committed them to
the Supreme Court, at least we can have a sort of plebiscite each time a new nominee to
that body is put forward. JUSTICE BLACKMUN not only regards this prospect with equanimity,
he solicits it. Ante, at 943.
* * *
There is a poignant aspect to today's opinion. Its length, and what
might be called its epic tone, suggest that its authors believe they are bringing to an
end a troublesome era in the history of our Nation, and of our Court. "It is the
dimension" of authority, they say, to cal[l] the contending sides of national
controversy to end their national division by accepting a common mandate rooted in the
Constitution. Ante, at 867.
There comes vividly to mind a portrait by Emanuel Leutze that hangs
in the Harvard Law School: Roger Brooke Taney, painted in 1859, the 82nd year of his life,
the 24th of his Chief Justiceship, the second after his opinion in Dred Scott. He is in
black, sitting in a shadowed red armchair, left hand resting upon a pad of paper in his
lap, right hand hanging limply, almost lifelessly, beside the inner arm of the chair. He
sits facing the viewer and staring straight out. There [505 U.S. 833, 1002] seems to be on
his face, and in his deep-set eyes, an expression of profound sadness and disillusionment.
Perhaps he always looked that way, even when dwelling upon the happiest of thoughts. But
those of us who know how the lustre of his great Chief Justiceship came to be eclipsed by
Dred Scott cannot help believing that he had that case - its already apparent consequences
for the Court and its soon-to-be-played-out consequences for the Nation - burning on his
mind. I expect that, two years earlier, he, too, had thought himself call[ing] the
contending sides of national controversy to end their national division by accepting a
common mandate rooted in the Constitution.
It is no more realistic for us in this case than it was for him in
that to think that an issue of the sort they both involved - an issue involving life and
death, freedom and subjugation - can be "speedily and finally settled" by the
Supreme Court, as President James Buchanan, in his inaugural address, said the issue of
slavery in the territories would be. See Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the
United States, S.Doc. No. 101-10, p. 126 (1989). Quite to the contrary, by foreclosing all
democratic outlet for the deep passions this issue arouses, by banishing the issue from
the political forum that gives all participants, even the losers, the satisfaction of a
fair hearing and an honest fight, by continuing the imposition of a rigid national rule
instead of allowing for regional differences, the Court merely prolongs and intensifies
the anguish.
We should get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and
where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.