The possibility that the Supreme Court could soon overturn the constitutional right to abortion has naturally placed focus on state-level abortion laws.
Some Republican-led states have cravenly instituted what are known as “trigger laws,” a set of abortion restrictions authorized to go into effect if and when the Supreme Court overturns the landmark Roe v. Wade decision of 1973 that affirmed federal abortion rights.
Michigan’s case is a bit different. The state is currently led by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat who could theoretically use her power to uphold abortion rights, but a restrictive state law enacted in 1931 would outlaw the procedure if Roe were overturned.
On Tuesday, a judge suspended that law, arguing it likely defied the state’s constitution.
“After 50 years of legal abortion in Michigan, there can be no doubt but that the right of personal autonomy and bodily integrity enjoyed by our citizens includes the right of a woman, in consultation with her physician, to terminate a pregnancy,” Judge Elizabeth Gleicher wrote in her ruling.
“From a constitutional standpoint, the right to obtain a safe medical treatment is indistinguishable from the right of a patient to refuse treatment,” she added, saying the Michigan law banning abortion likely violates the due process clause of the Michigan Constitution.








