The Volokh Conspiracy
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Kavanaugh Indicates States Can't Bar Residents From Getting Abortions in Other States
This makes it likely, though not certain, that the Supreme Court will strike down such laws if states enact them.

Today's Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization reversing Roe v. Wade raises a variety of important new issues of law and policy. One of them is whether states can bar residents from traveling out-of-state to get abortions. In his concurring opinion in Dobbs, Justice Brett Kavanaugh writes that this is question is "not especially difficult," and suggests the answer is "no":
[S]ome of the other abortion-related legal questions raised by today's decision are not especially difficult as a constitutional matter. For example, may a State bar a resident of that State from traveling to another State to obtain an abortion? In my view, the answer is no based on the constitutional right to interstate travel.
You might question the propriety of Kavanaugh opining on this issue that wasn't before the Court. But opine he did. And his doing so sends a strong signal that the Court is likely to strike down state laws banning interstate travel for purposes of getting an abortion. Kavanaugh appears to be the key swing voter among the five justices who voted to overrule Roe. It is highly likely that the three liberal dissenters would also vote to strike down such laws. The same could well be true of Chief Justice John Roberts (who wrote a concurring opinion that would have preserved Roe with respect to the vast majority of abortions). That would ensure the necessary five votes to strike down state bans on travel to get an abortion.
In a previous post on this issue, I pointed out that there are actually three compelling rationales for striking down state laws banning interstate travel for purposes of getting an abortion. In addition to the right-to-travel issue raised by Kavanaugh, there are also the Dormant Commerce Clause and procedural due process limits on states' extraterritorial jurisdiction. One or more of the other justices in the Dobbs majority might well endorse at least one of these theories. This is especially likely because upholding such laws would open the door to a variety of other state restrictions on interstate movement. If states can ban travel to get an abortion, why not travel to engage in any other activity a state government doesn't approve of?
While state abortion travel bans are likely to get struck down, the same is not necessarily true for a potential federal law banning such activity. Many of the arguments that apply against state laws do not apply to the federal government, most notably the Dormant Commerce Clause theory. Interestingly, however, the right-to-travel argument embraced by Kavanaugh is one that probably does constrain the feds, as well as the states.
The issue of abortion travel bans is distinct from the question of whether the federal government has the power to ban some or all abortions outright, regardless of whether they involve interstate travel or nor. There is an argument that such a law would exceed the scope of Congress's enumerated powers under the Constitution, even if there is no constitutional right to abortion. As far as I can tell, neither Kavanaugh nor any other justice addressed that question today. In my view, current Supreme Court precedent probably does allow Congress to ban all or most abortions, but that precedent is flawed and might potentially be cut back by the Court. Similar structural issues are raised by proposals (advanced by liberal Democrats) for a federal law overriding state abortion restrictions.
Of course, there are also significant political obstacles to passing any nationwide federal abortion law. Whether either side can overcome them remains to be seen.
UPDATE: It's worth noting that Kavanaugh also indicates it would be unconstitutional for a state to "retroactively impose liability or punishment for an abortion that occurred before today's decision takes effect."
UPDATE #2: For those interested, I wrote a previous post addressing the question of whether people will "vote with their feet" for abortion in a post-Roe world.
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People v. Betts, 34 Cal. 4th 1039 (2005): California can prosecute a California resident who drove two minor California residents to Nevada and molested them there.
If this is true, then a state can certainly prosecute a home-state resident who transported another home-state resident (i.e., a fetus, whom a lot of states will now define as a "person") out of state in order to murder them there (i.e., have an abortion).
Since you copypastaed your post I'll do the same for my response
Molestation is a crime everywhere. Abortion, not so much.
Abortion IS a crime in some states. That is the issue. But, more importantly, why would anyone trust Justice Beerface's opinion on this after he stated Roe v. Wade was settled precedent and Thomas indicated he would go after everything but interracial marriage (he is in an interracial marriage).
So far as I can tell from a quick reading of Betts, it does not discuss whether the federal Constitution's right to travel would be a defense to the crimes with which the defendant in that case was charged. Cases are not authority for propositions not discussed therein. If you are going to demonstrate that Justice Kavanaugh is wrong in stating that the right to travel would not prosecution of a woman who crossed state lines to have an abortion, you need to come up with another case.
There's nothing in the constitution that says people have the right to travel freely between the states.
But history and tradition support that right.
History and tradition used to apply to abortions too.
Again, three separate posts on the same topic, what gives. Landmark opinion and Kavanaugh's obvious remarks are the only thing to talk about?
Yeah, let's talk about Thomas suggesting he going after gay marriage and contraceptives but not interracial marriage.
One is covered by the Equal Protection Clause, as the Court has expressly held, the other two are only covered by penumbras and emanations.
See, that was not so hard, was it?
Oh? Under the Equal Protection Clause as understood in 1868, which the Court says today is the only relevant consideration? That must be why all those southern states immediately repealed their anti-miscegenation laws in 1869.
"understood in 1868"
The correct understanding in 1868 would support Loving.
Unfortunately, 14A was ignored by everyone back then, soon to be gutted by the Supreme Court. We went back to the original text intent in 1953.
Oh, okay then! No one recognized right X in 1868, but we can ignore that because they weren't correct! Somehow I missed that part of the Dobbs opinion.
The understanding in 1868 is by definition correct.
Perhaps you haven't read Dobbs or yesterday's Bruen opinion yet.
So conclusory! I like it.
Meant for Bored Lawyer. (Tips hat. Eats fried chicken).
This is a blog, not a law review. Go read Loving v. Virginia and then come back to me.
Again? I feel like I just did. Maybe use the search function when you read it next? Or do an MCLE?
He did not suggest that. He suggested that the idea that the Constitution requires those is wrong, which it is. Is there any political will to implement those at those point, even in the reddest of states?
He stated, in a concurring opinion, that the Court SHOULD overrule these opinions because substantive due process is essentially "bad" jurisprudence and that cases x, y, and z should be overruled on that basis.
For that reason, in future cases, we should reconsider all
of this Court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell. Because any substantive due process decision is “demonstrably erroneous,”
Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U. S. ___, ___ (2020) (THOMAS, J.,
concurring in judgment) (slip op., at 7), we have a duty to
“correct the error” established in those precedents, Gamble
v. United States, 587 U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (THOMAS, J., concurring) (slip op., at 9). After overruling these demonstrably erroneous decisions, the question would remain
whether other constitutional provisions guarantee the myriad rights that our substantive due process cases have generated.
Following this, Thomas indicates that even if the Court decides that it can regulate unenumerated rights, the Court decided that abortion is not one:
That said, even if the Clause
does protect unenumerated rights, the Court conclusively
demonstrates that abortion is not one of them under any
plausible interpretive approach.
Thomas concludes with:
Now today, the Court rightly overrules Roe and
Cite as: 597 U. S. ____ (2022) 7
THOMAS, J., concurring
Casey—two of this Court’s “most notoriously incorrect” substantive due process decisions, Timbs, 586 U. S., at ___
(opinion of THOMAS, J.) (slip op., at 2)—after more than 63
million abortions have been performed, see National Right
to Life Committee, Abortion Statistics (Jan. 2022), https://
http://www.nrlc.org/uploads/factsheets/FS01AbortionintheUS.pdf.
The harm caused by this Court’s forays into substantive
due process remains immeasurable.
Why reference 63 million abortions as harmful, if not to convey the policy driving his opinion?
Finally, where is Loving in Thomas' dissent?
You think these guys want to talk about all their criminal friends getting raked over the Jan 6 coals? Don't let's be silly.
California and Maryland are moving towards allowing "post-natal abortions", i.e., infanticide up to four weeks post-partum. Does the freedom to travel allow a mother in Virginia, e.g., to travel to MD to have her infant murdered [by the standards of VA]?
Really, this is what they're saying on Fox News now?
Even if it is, at least it's a more consistent pro-death stance.
@great unknown- That is inaccurate.
Wonderfully insightful correction of the record with everything you think on everything, ever. Thanks.
I read the Maryland bill. Someone's reading something stupid into it that's not there. A lot like they're tryings into anything justice Thomas has said.
"California and Maryland are moving towards allowing 'post-natal abortions', i.e., infanticide up to four weeks post-partum."
Citations?
You're a fucking idiot.
For those afraid of hordes of poor impoverished women somehow incapable of traveling like coked out minors and homeless people but still somehow able to be trusted with the decision on whether to terminate another life. I wouldn't be surprised if California et al started up programs to help them travel to get their abortions whether their taxpayers want it or not. And of course the Holyweird crowd has deep pockets too. Heck, even the Federal government might jump in.
There will almost certainly be some institutional workaround to the overturning of RvW that will siphon a good deal of money from our wallets. So I don't think the travel situation is going to end up being anywhere near the 'doom and gloom' as proabortionists constantly claim it will be. So thats pretty much the only argument against the ruling taken care of.
WOW....been doing a lot of daydreaming?
My healthcare plan announced today that it will cover any travel that may be necessary to procure covered reproductive health services.
The arithmetic there makes sense. Covering abortion-related travel is cheaper than covering several months of pre-natal care and delivery.
"…I wrote a previous post addressing the question of whether people will "vote with their feet" for abortion…"
If you have the foresight to move to a different state where you can easily get an abortion, you have the foresight to avoid ever needing an abortion.
Except when you get raped by Zeus, the good reverend, or Uncle Billy in Texas.
Yeah, except in wild outlier situations that leftists always bring up because they don’t have any good arguments for the 99.9% of other situations.
Those outliers are why we have exceptions to rules.
Exceptions for extremely exceptional situations don’t invalidate or otherwise affect anything related to normal situations.
Or Former POTUS William Juf-uf-son Clinton
On the OP issue, wasn't there a case a while ago about states outlawing advertising for gambling in neighboring states? Gambling seems to me a classic example of somethign that is criminal in some states and legal in others. (Maybe prostition, also.)
Outlawing advertising for something that is illegal in one state and outlawing traveling to that other state are two separate issues.
That said, I think prohibiting advertising to do something that is legal violates the 1st Amendment.
Will the Supreme Court continue to look the other way while states pass laws letting citizens sue each other over abortions? If a private anti-abortion group can sue a Texas citizen because she travels to California for a legal abortion, then setting up bounties neatly circumvents the issue.
Haven't checked for awhile, since I haven't needed either in awhile...
What costs more, an I-phone, or an Abortion?
Frank "still sends Telegrams"
Who would credit Justice Kavanaugh's reassurances along this line any more than Sen. Collins should have believed nominee Kavanaugh's assurances?
Other than a gullible, poorly educated, fairy-tale believing Republican conservative, I mean.
Leaking the opinion really worked, didn't it, Jerry.
Frank "No Better than anyone, No Worse"
Gee Mr Justice, thanks for allowing me to travel freely in the US. I'm surprised that the secret decoder ring that only works in 1868 allows this "right".
Well I think you have that right, but does the government? Is it the overwhelming position of the courts?
I ask because the idea of requiring a vaccine for interstate or even intra-city travel was at least broached, and that would certainly create a bigger burden on the right to travel than a ban on traveling for an abortion.
Concurring opinions and 50 cents won't buy you a cup of coffee. If they did then Justice Alito's 10-page concurrence in Caetano would have resolved the question as to whether or not electric stun guns are arms protected by the Second Amendment.
So I travel to another state and procure a service. I return to my state and my state's rules take precedence. Happens all the time, quite explicitly in law when it comes to tax so they're not going to kill the principle.
That said, the restrictions I see are on providers, not their customers so maybe not take pro abortion conferences organized in neighboring anti-abortion states?