Five conservative Supreme Court justices gave the green light to Texas Republicans overnight, clearing the way for the state’s outlandish abortion ban to continue. For all intents and purposes, the Roe v. Wade protections that Americans have enjoyed for the last half-century no longer apply in the nation’s second largest state.
None of this, however, has happened in a vacuum. The dramatic developments are already reverberating far outside the Lone Star State.
In other state capitols:
It didn’t take long for observers to realize that if the Supreme Court’s conservative majority is willing to tolerate the Texas Republicans’ abortion ban, opponents of reproductive rights in other states can simply adopt — and implement — Texas-style statutes of their own.
Indeed, Wilton Simpson, the Republican president of Florida’s state Senate, suggested this morning that he and his colleagues are “already working on” such a proposal. NBC News’ Sahil Kapur noted soon after that bills copying Texas’ law “are in the works in other Republican-led states.”
At the White House:
President Joe Biden this morning issued a written statement, which read in part, “I am directing that Council and the Office of the White House Counsel to launch a whole-of-government effort to respond to this decision, looking specifically to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice to see what steps the federal government can take to ensure that women in Texas have access to safe and legal abortions as protected by Roe, and what legal tools we have to insulate women and providers from the impact of Texas’ bizarre scheme of outsourced enforcement to private parties.”
On Capitol Hill:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi issued a statement of her own this morning, not only denouncing Texas’ abortion ban, but also vowing to bring the Women’s Health Protection Act (H.R. 3755), which is designed to enshrine reproductive health care for all women into federal law. Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts has endorsed the same approach.
Those legislative efforts, however, face insurmountable odds, at least in the short term. Even if the Democratic-led House were to pass such a measure, the bill would be subject to an inevitable Republican filibuster. And even if the Democratic-led Senate were to put the filibuster rule aside, such a bill would fail anyway: Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia remains opposed to reproductive rights.
On the 2021 campaign trail:
In this year’s gubernatorial races, Republicans have not been especially eager to talk about reproductive rights. Now, they don’t have much of a choice.
Politico reported this morning, “The new Texas abortion ban is refocusing both parties’ attention on races for state office over the next year, setting the stage for a clash over abortion rights at the ballot box. On Wednesday, outraged Democrats sought to drag the issue of abortion rights into elections across the country, particularly in two key, blue-state governor’s races this fall: California and Virginia.”








