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North Dakota Constitution Likely Secures a Right to Life- and Health-Preserving Abortions
From today's North Dakota Supreme Court decision in Wrigley v. Romanick, written by Chief Justice Jon Jensen, joined by Justices Daniel Crothers and Lisa Fair McEvers, and by District Judge Daniel Narum, sitting by designation (in place of Justice Douglas Bahr, who was recused):
[W]e conclude RRWC has a substantial likelihood in establishing there is a fundamental right for a woman to obtain an abortion in instances where it is necessary to preserve her life or health. We need go no further here to determine whether there are fundamental rights broader in scope.
"Our overriding objective is to give effect to the intent and purpose of the people adopting the constitutional statement." To accomplish this we must construe the constitution in light of the contemporaneous history existing at and prior to the adoption of the constitutional provision.
North Dakota Constitution article I, section 1 was enacted in 1889 when North Dakota was admitted as a state to the Union. Section 1 provides, in part, "[a]ll individuals are by nature equally free and independent and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty; acquiring, possessing and protecting property and reputation; pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness[.]" N.D. Const. art. I, § 1. The North Dakota Constitution explicitly provides all citizens of North Dakota the right of enjoying and defending life and pursuing and obtaining safety. These rights implicitly include the right to obtain an abortion to preserve the woman's life or health.
North Dakota's history and traditions support this conclusion. North Dakota has a long history of permitting women to obtain abortions to preserve their life or health. Prior to statehood, North Dakota, then part of the Dakota Territory, criminalized abortions but explicitly provided an abortion was not a criminal act if the treatment was done to preserve the life of the woman:
Every person who administers to any pregnant woman, or who prescribes for any such woman, or advises or procures any such woman to take any medicine, drug or substance, or uses or employs any instrument, or other means whatever, with intent thereby to procure the miscarriage of such woman, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life, is punishable by imprisonment in the territorial prison not exceeding three years, or in a county jail not exceeding one year.
… After statehood, North Dakota enacted a law which criminalized abortions but again explicitly provided an abortion would not be considered a criminal act if the treatment was done to preserve the life of the woman …. North Dakota's legislature repeatedly reaffirmed the criminal prohibitions in substantially the same form and always with the same exception for abortions "necessary to preserve her life." North Dakota did not criminalize life-preserving abortions until N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 was enacted in 2007 and became eligible for enforcement in 2022.
Medical journals published shortly after statehood indicate it was common knowledge that an abortion could be performed to preserve the life or health of the woman.
There are not infrequently cases in which an abortion is imperative: the mentally unfit who might become deranged; the woman with a narrow brim or outlet because of which her life might be in danger and a Cesar[e]an section is the only relief; the woman who may bleed to death; the eclamptic; and those suffering from dangerous diseases. This class, fortunately, is small in number; and abortion is performed only after a deliberate and careful consultation in which the dangers of the abortion are weighed from every side.
Criminal Abortions, 34 Journal-Lancet 81, 82 (1914). Additionally, in the journal a doctor describes an abortion performed: "Mrs. T. first came under the writer's care for acute septic abortion. The uterus were emptied, and after a rather continued run of temperature the patient made a symptomatic recovery." North Dakota recognized and approved abortions performed to preserve the life or health of the woman.
The State asserts abortion cannot be included as a fundamental right, because the inherent rights reserved to the people under sections 1 and 12, such as the fundamental right of parents to parent their child, are distinguishable from abortion because abortion, unlike the right to parent one's own child, does not have longstanding roots in American culture. This assertion is incorrect, as noted above, North Dakota has a longstanding history of allowing pregnant women to receive an abortion to preserve her life or health. The legislature enacted and reaffirmed laws which always provided an exception to preserve the life of the woman up and until 2007 when N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 was enacted as a trigger law. Like the right to parent one's own child, the right to receive a health or life-preserving abortion is deeply rooted in North Dakota's history and culture….
Because we hold the North Dakota Constitution provides a fundamental right to receive an abortion to preserve a pregnant woman's life or health, the constitutionality of N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 must be analyzed under the strict scrutiny standard. A statute which restricts a fundamental right is subject to strict scrutiny standard of review which will only be justified if it furthers a compelling government interest and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest….
The State has a compelling interest in protecting women's health and protecting unborn human life, as these interests are at least of the same importance as compelling interests previously identified by this Court. Nevertheless, the State must still show N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 is necessary to achieve the compelling state interests. While we note the legislature can regulate abortion, it must do so in a manner that is narrowly tailored to achieve the compelling interest. On its face, N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 unnecessarily restricts a woman's access to an abortion to preserve her life or health….
Moreover, N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 provides an affirmative defense only if in the professional judgment of the physician the abortion was necessary to prevent the death of the female. A pregnant woman is unable to obtain an abortion in order to preserve her health, regardless of the potential health consequences. Preserving the life or health of the woman necessarily includes providing an abortion when necessary to prevent severe, life altering damage. The United States District of Idaho explained the grave risks to health a pregnant woman faces:
Pregnant women in Idaho routinely arrive at emergency rooms experiencing severe complications. The patient might be spiking a fever, experiencing uterine cramping and chills, contractions, shortness of breath, or significant vaginal bleeding. The ER physician may diagnose her with, among other possibilities, traumatic placental abruption, preeclampsia, or a preterm premature rupture of the membranes. In those situations, the physician may be called upon to make complex, difficult decisions in a fast-moving, chaotic environment. She may conclude that the only way to prevent serious harm to the patient or save her life is to terminate the pregnancy—a devastating result for the doctor and the patient….
Yet if the physician does not perform the abortion, the pregnant patient faces grave risks to her health—such as severe sepsis requiring limb amputation, uncontrollable uterine hemorrhage requiring hysterectomy, kidney failure requiring lifelong dialysis, hypoxic brain injury, or even death. And this woman, if she lives, potentially may have to live the remainder of her life with significant disabilities and chronic medical conditions as a result of her pregnancy complication. All because Idaho law prohibited the physician from performing the abortion.
Granted, the Idaho statute offers the physician the cold comfort of a narrow affirmative defense to avoid conviction. But only if she convinces a jury that, in her good faith medical judgment, performing the abortion was "necessary to prevent the death of the pregnant woman" can she possibly avoid conviction. Even then, there is no certainty a jury will acquit. And the physician cannot enjoy the benefit of this affirmative defense if she performed the abortion merely to prevent serious harm to the patient, rather than to save her life.
A law that on its face criminalizes a life-preserving abortion, infringes unnecessarily on a woman's fundamental right to seek an abortion to preserve her life or health, at least in part, cannot withstand strict scrutiny.
The State asserts N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 is narrowly tailored because it provides a "narrow" definition of abortion. Section 12.1-31-12 defines abortion as follows:
"Abortion" means the use or prescription of any substance, device, instrument, medicine, or drug to intentionally terminate the pregnancy of an individual known to be pregnant. The term does not include an act made with the intent to increase the probability of a live birth; preserve the life or health of a child after live birth; or remove a dead, unborn child who died as a result of a spontaneous miscarriage, an accidental trauma, or a criminal assault upon the pregnant female or her unborn child.
This definition is not narrowly tailored to women's health. Notably, the definition does not include abortions for ectopic pregnancies, which is a pregnancy where the fertilized egg "does not implant appropriately within the uterus" and is potentially lethal to the mother. Therefore, under the statutory construction of N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12, an abortion to treat an ectopic pregnancy would be a criminal act. As noted above, criminalizing life-preserving abortions is not necessary to promote the State's interests in women's health and protecting unborn human life….
Justice Jerod Tufte concurred in the judgment; he didn't sign with the majority opinion, though he said he agreed with it if properly understood:
I agree with the majority opinion, with the understanding that to reach the result here, "life or health" need not be understood more broadly than its application to the right of self-defense….
The North Dakota Constitution guarantees the "inalienable right[ ] … of enjoying and defending life and liberty." Commonly, an individual exercises this right of self-defense by responding to a threat of imminent serious bodily injury or death with physical force. Where a pregnancy raises a similar threat of serious bodily injury or death, the pregnant woman has a fundamental right to preserve her life and health with the aid of a physician. Our recognition of this fundamental right to preserve one's life does not depend on resolving the disputed point of pregnancy at which there are two lives that must be considered. The State has a compelling interest in protecting unborn human life, which RRWC does not dispute. We have long understood that a woman has an inalienable right to employ deadly force against another person when necessary to protect herself against death or serious bodily injury.
Likewise, the State's compelling interest on behalf of an unborn child must yield to the pregnant woman's right to abort a pregnancy when necessary to preserve her life or health.
If there is merely evidence sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt about a self-defense claim, a defendant is entitled to a jury instruction on self-defense and the State must prove the absence of self-defense as an element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Where an abortion is performed in situations that fall within the constitutional right of self-defense, section 12.1-31-12, N.D.C.C., unconstitutionally places the evidentiary burden on the defendant to raise not merely a reasonable doubt, but to prove an affirmative defense by a preponderance of the evidence….
We do not decide here what scope of health risks may give rise to abortion as medical self-defense. In the district court, the parties will have opportunity to present historical evidence illuminating the meaning of Article I, § 1, and to further develop their legal arguments. Before Roe v. Wade (1973), restrictive abortion laws in North Dakota and nationwide uniformly recognized exceptions for abortion intended to save the woman's life. See Eugene Volokh, Medical Self-Defense, Prohibited Experimental Therapies, and Payment for Organs, 120 Harv. L. Rev. 1813, 1825 (2007) ("[T]he abortion-as- self-defense right is largely uncontroversial, at least when threats to the mother's life, and not just to her psychological health, are involved: it was accepted even in Chief Justice Rehnquist's Roe dissent, [and] it was recognized by all the restrictive abortion laws in effect when Roe was decided.")….
Justice Lisa Fair McEvers concurred, joined by Justice Crothers, and District Judge Daniel Narum:
I write separately to explain how and why the rights protected under the North Dakota Constitution may be broader than those protected under the United States Constitution…. The prominent late nineteenth century American legal scholar Thomas Cooley cautioned against mistaking a state constitution's recognition of a right as being the source of its creation:
In considering State constitutions we must not commit the mistake of supposing that, because individual rights are guarded and protected by them, they must also be considered as owing their origin to them. These instruments measure the powers of the rulers, but they do not measure the rights of the governed.
Professor Cooley explained a constitution "grants no rights to the people," but instead is "[d]esigned for their protection in the enjoyment of the rights and powers which they possessed before the constitution was made."
Professor Cooley also described the difference between the Constitution of the United States and a state constitution:
It is to be borne in mind, however, that there is a broad difference between the Constitution of the United States and the constitutions of States as regards the powers which may be exercised under them. The government of the United States is one of enumerated powers; the governments of the States are possessed of all general powers of legislation. When a law of Congress is assailed as void, we look in the national Constitution to see if the grant of specified powers is broad enough to embrace it; but when a State law is attacked on the same ground, it is presumably valid in any case, and this presumption is a conclusive one, unless in the Constitution of the United States or of the State we are able to discover that it is prohibited. We look in the Constitution of the United States for grants of legislative power, but in the constitution of the State to ascertain if any limitations have been imposed upon the complete power with which the legislative department of the State was vested in its creation…. That instrument has been aptly termed a legislative act by the people themselves in their sovereign capacity, and is therefore the paramount law. Its object is not to grant legislative power, but to confine and restrain it. Without constitutional limitations, the power to make law would be absolute. These limitations are created and imposed by express words, or arise by necessary implication…. The executive can do no legislative act, nor the legislature any executive act, and neither can exercise judicial authority.
It does not follow, however, that in every case the courts, before they set aside a law as invalid, must be able to find in the constitution some specific inhibition which has been disregarded, or some express command which has been disobeyed.
Professor Cooley described certain rights as "fundamental," specifically noting "that all men are by nature free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety and happiness." Likely, it is no coincidence that N.D. Const. art. I, § 1 identifies all of the natural and inalienable rights identified by Professor Cooley with the same language he used ….
Before he spoke to the [North Dakota] constitutional convention [the opinion includes more details on that speech -EV], Professor Cooley wrote in Constitutional Limitations it "is the peculiar province of the judicial department," as opposed to the legislature, "to adjudicate upon, and protect, the rights and interests of individual citizens, and to that end to construe and apply the laws." Shortly before the constitutional convention, the United States Supreme Court also discussed the duty of the judiciary in Boyd v. United States (1886), explaining courts must be "watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any stealthy encroachment thereon." Courts, it explained, must liberally construe provisions protecting fundamental rights:
[C]onstitutional provisions for the security of person and property should be liberally construed. A close and literal construction deprives them of half their efficacy, and leads to gradual depreciation of the right, as if it consisted more in sound than in substance.
Based on this legal precedent, we can assume the drafters understood courts would construe broadly descriptions protecting life, liberty, and security of a person liberally. They nonetheless chose at the outset to enshrine broad guarantees of freedom in N.D. Const. art. I, § 1….
Our reading of the Constitution requires a recognition that the drafters did not set out to delineate in Article I, § 1 the specific rights it protects and to exclude others. Rather, the limitations placed on the legislature in Article I, § 1 arise by necessary implication. By its nature, the Constitution was meant to "define the limits" of the State's exercise of power "so as to protect individual rights, and shield them against the assumption of arbitrary power." The rights mentioned in Article I, § 1 are "among" those "certain inalienable rights" that "all individuals" possess "by nature." For example, the Constitution does not specifically identify a number of fundamental rights, and yet this Court has recognized the same. See Hoff v. Berg (N.D. 1999) (stating parents have a fundamental right to parent their children); State ex rel. Schuetzle v. Vogel (N.D. 1995) (recognizing liberty interest to refuse unwanted medical treatment); Johnson v. Elkin (N.D. 1978) (identifying liberty right to engage in ordinary occupation without state regulation).
While I agree, and have signed with the majority, I write separately to recognize analysis of the state constitution will not always parallel analysis of the federal constitution. In addition, while we have only narrowly considered the fundamental right to an abortion "at least in the limited instances of life-saving and health preserving circumstances," the district court is free to consider whether additional fundamental rights are implicated by the statute under N.D. Const. art. I, § 1, or any other constitutional provision. For example, while the parties have not addressed N.D. Const. art. I, § 25, which provides comprehensive constitutional rights for victims of crimes, the rights found therein may be implicated nonetheless by N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12.
A quick thought: The majority makes a powerful historical argument that North Dakota abortion law had long exempted abortions needed to preserve the woman's life; and I agree that the right to defend life should be read to encompass that. (Indeed, many state courts have read provisions such as North Dakota's to secure a right to defend life or, in some situations, even the right to defend property.)
But the purely historical argument doesn't seem to me to extend to a right to abortions that are needed merely to preserve health rather than to protect life; the sources the majority cites don't mention health. And of course one concern that many opponents of abortion have (I say this as not an opponent of abortion myself) is that a truly broad right to abortion to protect "health" could be turned into a right to abortion on demand, so long as the woman claims that the abortion threatens her mental health and a doctor agrees.
On the other hand, I think Justice Tufte's analogy to self-defense could be powerful here: Self-defense law, throughout the nation, has long recognized a right to use deadly force (even against nonculpable people who threaten it, such as the insane or people who are innocently mistaken) not just to protect life, but also to prevent serious bodily injury. That fits well with the constitutional recognition of a similar right to prevent death or serious bodily injury to the woman through an abortion.
Congratulations to Meetra Mehdizadeh, who argued the case on behalf of the challengers.
Thanks to Seth Thompson for the pointer.
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Ha "Read More" fallen into disfavor?
Just forgot to add the "Read More" break; fixed now.
More penumbras and emanations. Fire them all.
mulched: I appreciate the difficulty of finding a right to contraception in the penumbras and emanations from the First Amendment, Third Amendment, Fourth Amendment, and the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, which is what the Griswold lead opinion relied on. (Griswold's reference to the Ninth Amendment might be more plausible, but it may well be that it should be limited to rights that had already long been recognized.)
But here, the North Dakota Constitution expressly recognizes a right to "defend[] life." Why wouldn't that include a right to get a life-saving abortion?
The number of abortions that could be called "self defense" of the mother's life is vanishingly small.
The health exception is where the game is, and eliding from "life" to "life and health" and from there to an expansive definition of "health".
In theory, the medical self defense rationale seems plausible.
In reality, many experts say that an abortion to "save a mother's life" is not just vanishingly rare, but actually nonexistent. Treatment of an ectopic pregnancy is not an abortion, for example.
Pregnancy and delivery are not without risks, however. There are still women who die in childbirth, there are sometimes complications, and a bad pregnancy can create other risks for women's health. That's a lot of risk you're asking women to assume.
I would say that that's just circular: Abortion to save the mother's life never happens, because it's not an 'abortion' if you do it to save the mother's life.
I mean, there are plenty of medical treatments which will predictably end a pregnancy, but which legitimately aren't abortions because they do that as an unintentional side effect. Chemotherapy, for instance.
But in the case of ectopic pregnancy, the pregnancy IS the problem being treated, and the term "abortion" is perfectly appropriate, even if ending the pregnancy isn't the actual purpose. It is at least a means to the actual purpose, not an incidental side effect.
Mind you, even PP said that up until a few days ago, when they scrubbed their site to stick to the new talking point, so maybe that is how the terminology works.
Really. Not an abortion.
Wait, I heard this nonsense 'round here last year. After that 10 year old girl case. Someone, very seriously and without any sense of irony, said that a ten year old terminating their pregnancy wasn't an abortion, because she was too young.
And apparently this is an actual normal thing in pro-life circles? That abortions they approve of are magically "not abortions" because of it?
Nonsense.
Yes, until recently it was an actual normal thing in pro-life circles like Planned parenthood.
Planned Parenthood website removes distinction between ectopic pregnancy and abortion
"Planned Parenthood changed the language on its national webpage last week explaining ectopic pregnancy and abortion, removing one sentence that distinguished treatment of the condition from an abortion."
mulched:
"The number of abortions that could be called “self defense” of the mother’s life is vanishingly small."
According to the CDC, there are over 100,000 ectopic pregnancies per year. Every single one is life-threatening to the mother. That's just one example of a pregnancy complication that is considered life-threatening. It is far from "vanishingly small," it is not rare at all, unfortunately.
The officially reported rate is slightly under 2%, based on diagnosed ectopic pregnancies compared to diagnosed pregnancies. The rate of embryos implanting off-target may be more or less. In reading about this I learned there are rare records of an embryo implanting in the spleen or liver.
I did not find what the actual risk to the mother is. Given a diagnosed ectopic pregnancy, what are the odds of various outcomes? There is no ethical way to do a study and the difference between a 1% and a 100% mortality rate would not affect the medical advice to terminate.
The risk is presumably greater than the overall .01% to .1% risk of maternal death from pregnancy, which red state legislatures say you have to put up with.
Yes, I would agree that it is significantly above that rate. My understanding is that an ectopic pregnancy can never lead to a viable fetus, and that all cases can lead to death for the mother if untreated, unless the embryo or fetus spontaneously aborts. It's hard for me to believe any legislature in the country would prevent abortion under these conditions, since there is no question the fetus will not be viable, but I've been surprised before.
"North Dakota did not criminalize life-preserving abortions until N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 was enacted in 2007 and became eligible for enforcement in 2022."
" The legislature enacted and reaffirmed laws which always provided an exception to preserve the life of the woman up and until 2007 when N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12 was enacted as a trigger law."
So, then I looked up the statute to see what it actually said.
N.D.C.C. § 12.1-31-12
"12.1-31-12. Abortion - Affirmative defenses.
...
[Not an inch below the quoted text, you find this, and it WAS quoted in the decision!]
3. The following are affirmative defenses under this section:
a. That the abortion was necessary in professional judgment and was intended to prevent the death of the pregnant female.
b. That the abortion was to terminate a pregnancy that resulted from gross sexual imposition, sexual imposition, sexual abuse of a ward, or incest, as those offenses are defined in chapter 12.1-20.
c. That the individual was acting within the scope of that individual's regulated profession and under the direction of or at the direction of a physician."
How exactly does that criminalize life preserving abortions? Now, I'll grant you the "health" part of that. But it absolutely does NOT criminalize life preserving abortions.
So, why did they keep saying that it did?
Designating an affirmative defense to a criminal statute does not mean that the conduct prohibited by the statute is not criminalized. The burden of proving the applicability of an affirmative defense rests upon the accused. That necessitates a trial. If the conduct specified in the statute is not criminalized, no trial is necessary.
The Dunning-Kruger effect is a bitch, Brett.
Gee, South Dakota needed it's supreme court to say that you shouldn't tell a woman to die rather then giver her an abortion.
Compassionate.
No, South Dakota did NOT need its supreme court to say that. Again, look at the actual text of the law: It explicitly permits abortion to preserve life. Not inferred, it comes right out and says so.
Apparently the complaint here isn't really that the law doesn't permit such abortions. It's that the law doesn't make simply asserting that as the purpose of the abortion a free ticket out of interacting with the legal system; A prosecutor can prosecute the abortion, and force you to assert the defense in court.
Which, sure, is a pain in the ass, if the prosecutors decide to make it one. But this doesn't make abortion any different from other rights that are asserted as affirmative defenses, such as the right to self defense.
And, after all, isn't self defense exactly the right being asserted here?
So, if I understand you correctly, a state which allows for abortion to save the life of a mother could choose to pull doctors into court every time this happens and subject them to expensive proceedings, both in real money and lost time working, as a means to discourage medical providers from assisting pregnant women in crisis?
#DakotaConfusion
So that's what "things went South" means!
Fair.
Your correction, not North Dakota.
Health has many facets. Physical health, emotional health, financial health. familial health, among others. An exception for health undefined is virtually limitless.
"An exception for health undefined is virtually limitless."
Yes
That's a feature, not a bug.
But if you eliminate health or define it super narrowly you’re demanding doctors wait until the last minute to do something which is incredibly dangerous to both life and longterm health.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/06/us/texas-abortion-ban-suit.html
"define it super narrowly"
Why is "super" in there?
Unless you define it narrowly, pro-abortion judges will just let you use the exception for anything. It already happened under Roe jurisprudence, de facto abortion on demand without limit.
Because that’s what states like Ohio and Texas have done. Hence the lawsuit. Hence the ten year olds going out of state.
A super narrow construction of what Health constitutes leads to women going into sepsis.
“An exception for health undefined is virtually limitless.”
Uh, no. Suppose an abortion is performed in a state that criminalizes abortion, subject to an exception for maternal health. A prosecutor alleges that the procedure was unnecessary to preserve maternal health, while the accused asserts that it was necessary. The necessity (or lack thereof) in such a case presents a question for a properly instructed jury. The parties would likely present expert testimony bearing on the issue.
I mean, that's kind of legislator's jobs, isn't it?
Writing the law that means the "for health" exceptions aren't undefined, but instead are defined?
If you know about the problem that only having "for life" exceptions, but not "for health" causes (and any responsible legislator should know this by now), and refuse to correct your law, then you're making a deliberate choice that those women will have to either wait until things progress such that it is life threatening, or leave the state.
Giving them a pass because they'd have to actually do their jobs is far more kindness then they've earned.
Writing the "for health" exceptions as undefined is intentional, of course, in order chill legal activity and shield the law from attacks.
Other states have managed to codify health-based exceptions without making them hopelessly vague. For example, some explicitly exclude mental health. Outside of the abortion context there are terms like "severe bodily injury" that clearly do or do not apply to most assaults.
Lawmakers could ask an expert to run down the most common risks of pregnancy and write a law that works for those cases.
Lawmakers could ...
Only if they wanted to act in good faith, and do their job.
The fact is that most anti-abortion lawmakers don't give a flying fuck about that, and just want to pander to the religious nutcases.
North Dakota, not content to be merely among the strongest contenders for "least educated state," seems resolute about becoming a state educated, reasoning, skilled women with choices and resources will avoid in all respects.
How long before North Dakota has no modern maternity unit? Then, how long until the final legitimate hospital in North Dakota closes?
"Medical journals published shortly after statehood indicate it was common knowledge that an abortion could be performed to preserve the life or health of the woman."
Much more straightforward than the Bruen historical tradition cases.
The court could have declared that the constitution created an affirmative "defense of health" defense. Instead the statute is invalid for failure to explicitly provide one. The injunction against enforcement is a preliminary injunction. It is possible a more carefully tailored injunction will follow a trial.
I do wonder what the legislature was thinking when it didn't allow abortions based on severe health risk to mother or inability of the fetus to survive to term or outside the womb.
I do wonder what the legislature was thinking ...
I don't wonder, and a moment's reflection will convince you that this is no mystery at all.
But not a right to life?
This is a right for the mother. She has a right to protect her life and health.