NEW YORK Though it may be years before Supreme Court reconsiders the Roe v. Wade decision, liberal activists say the ruling that established abortion rights already is eroding steadily under state-by-state pressure from the pro-life movement.
In two states, lawmakers are proposing broad abortion bans they hope will eventually win approval from a reconfigured, more conservative Supreme Court led by new Chief Justice John Roberts and including pending nominee Samuel Alito.
Legislators elsewhere are meanwhile seeking to tighten a range of abortion restrictions, part of a persistent national campaign that prompted one leading liberal group to give 19 states including Utah a failing grade on reproductive rights in a report issued Wednesday.
Abortion opponents "are using the states as laboratories," said Nancy Keenan, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America.
"It's a picking away at our freedom and privacy, legislature by legislature, law by law, with the ultimate goal of overturning Roe v. Wade," she said.
Among the states getting F's in NARAL's status report are Indiana and Ohio, where conservative lawmakers are introducing bills to ban abortion outright. They hope their measures become law and then face legal challenges that lead to a Supreme Court reconsideration of the 1973 Roe ruling.
"It is time to return the abortion issue to the states," said Mark Harrington, executive director of the Center for Bio Ethical Reform Midwest and a supporter of the proposed Ohio ban.
NARAL and its allies believe Alito, expected to win confirmation to the Supreme Court later this month, would represent a fourth vote on the nine-member court against Roe putting the ruling in jeopardy if one of the five supporting justices was replaced by an opponent.
It remains unclear how far the proposed Indiana or Ohio bans will progress. Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels a Republican who opposes abortion suggested that the ban has "a very limited prospect of ultimate success" until Americans become less divided on abortion.
Mary Spaulding Balch, director of state legislation for the National Right to Life Committee, said she is cautiously optimistic that the new Supreme Court with two justices appointed by President Bush will be more favorable to abortion restrictions even if reversal of Roe is not imminent.
- News analysis: From confidence to confusion...
- Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Maine churches fighting gay marriage
- Does Romney's faith concern a quarter of...
- Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin Hatch...
- Top 10 poorest states in America
- House GOP plans summer tax cut vote
- News analysis: From confidence to...
53 - Does Romney's faith concern a quarter...
44 - 'A woman who. ...': Mitt Romney's...
34 - Search for Mitt Romney running mate in...
33 - Orrin Hatch is now the hunted —...
30 - Olympic hurdler Lolo Jones says she's a...
29 - Can U.S. schools adopt education...
24 - Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin...
24






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments