Federal Court Blocks South Carolina’s Unconstitutional Ban on Abortion
- Story

Abortion is already severely restricted in South Carolina, and extreme bans like these are particularly harmful for people who cannot afford to travel long distances and who already face barriers to accessing health care due to discrimination, implicit biases, and economic inequality—including people with lower incomes, young people, Black, Indigenous People of Color (BIPOC), members of the LGBTQI+ community, those living in rural communities, and people with disabilities.
A ban on abortion at six weeks of pregnancy is a violation of Supreme Court precedent, dating back to Roe v. Wade, that a state cannot ban abortion prior to viability. In this case, the Center and its partners will argue that the six-week ban violates a patient’s substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Six-week bans on abortion have been repeatedly struck down by courts as unconstitutional. In 2015, Center lawsuits successfully blocked a six-week ban on abortion in North Dakota—and in 2020, blocked similar bans in Mississippi and Georgia. South Carolina: Hostile to Abortion Rights According to the Center’s state-by-state analytical tool, What if Roe Fell, South Carolina is hostile to abortion rights, with numerous medically unnecessary restrictions that already make it difficult for people to access care in the state—including a state-mandated waiting period, required biased counseling, and numerous targeted regulations of abortion provider (TRAP) laws. South Carolina also restricts the use of telemedicine for abortion care and criminalizes people who self-manage their abortions. In South Carolina, 93 percent of counties do not have a single abortion provider. And every state that borders South Carolina is also hostile to abortion rights, leaving South Carolinians who make the decision to seek abortion care forced to face numerous burdensome obstacles or travel across more than one state to access care. Newest Ban is Part of a Larger Trend of Ever-more Extreme Restrictions by U.S. States South Carolina’s abortion ban is one of the hundreds of laws designed to restrict abortion to the point of elimination in the U.S. Since 2011, anti-abortion state lawmakers have passed nearly 500 laws that make abortion difficult and, sometimes, impossible to access. Many of these requirements—including multiple clinic visits and prohibitions on telemedicine—endanger the health and well-being of pregnant people and undermine public health efforts during the COVID-19 pandemic. And in a move that would further restrict health care access during an unprecedented public health emergency, anti-abortion lawmakers in nine states used the COVID-19 pandemic as an excuse to try to ban or severely restrict abortion access last year. So far in 2021, state lawmakers have already introduced more than 200 abortion bans and restrictions, including more than 100 bills seeking to ban abortion at various points of pregnancy. Research shows that a woman who is forced to carry an unwanted pregnancy is more likely to experience intimate partner violence, health problems, poverty, and ongoing financial distress, including rising debt and eviction. The Center and partner organizations are working toward the reintroduction of The Women’s Health Protection Act, federal legislation that would protect abortion access throughout the U.S. from bans and unnecessary restrictions. During the last Congress, this bill earned more co-sponsors than ever before and it is on track to be reintroduced in the new Congress. Learn more:- The Center’s 2020 Legislative Wrap-Up, outlining abortion measures passed in U.S. states during the year.
- What if Roe Fell, the Center’s digital map providing a state-by-state analysis of abortion laws and policies.
- Evaluating Priorities, an online resource by the Center and Ibis Reproductive Health that found that U.S. states with more anti-abortion policies tend to have fewer policies supporting pregnant people, children, and families.
Fuel the Fight for Reproductive Rights
Your donation allows us to defend reproductive rights, change policies, and amplify voices around the globe.