NPR: Rare Agreement On Abortion: South Dakota Law Makes Poor Test Case
By Julie Rovner
“When Republican Gov. Dennis Daugaard of South Dakota signed into law Tuesday one of the most restrictive abortion measures in the nation, abortion-rights groups were quick to fill reporters’ inboxes with statements condemning the measure and promises to file suit.
The silence from nation’s largest anti-abortion groups, which you’d normally expect to match every statement, was notable.
It doesn’t take a lot of investigative reporting to figure out why. Both sides in the debate are pretty sure this particular law is likely to be found unconstitutional by the current Supreme Court, even if one side is loathe to admit it publicly.
The law in question requires women seeking an abortion to first consult with the physician who will perform the procedure, then wait 72 hours before having it. That’s 48 house longer than any state in the nation, including South Dakota.”
“Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in an interview with Shots that should the law come before the Supreme Court, it could get struck down on any number of grounds in addition to the fact that it presents an ‘undue burden’ on a woman’s ability to obtain an abortion.
Among other things, she said, forcing women to hear ‘sit through an ideological lecture about whey they shouldn’t have an abortion’ violates their first amendment free speech rights. And requiring women to disclose their medical conditions and pregnancy to non-physician third parties, she said, is a violation of medical privacy laws.
‘I would argue that it would be a bad case to take’ to the Supreme Court, Northup said.
Even some abortion foes aren’t keen on a case that would lead to the justices, once again, restating a woman’s right to have an abortion.”
Read the complete story on NPR’s Health Blog, Shots >