| Could Congress Ban Abortion Nationwide if Roe Gets Overruled? 
 Under current Supreme Court precedent,  the answer is probably "yes." But that precedent might not hold, thanks  in part to Clarence Thomas
 Ilya Somin           				 						| 			5.3.2022
 
 As you probably know by now, a  leaked draft Supreme Court opinion indicates there may well be five justices prepared to overrule  Roe v. Wade. For a long time, many assumed that if Roe  were to be overruled, abortion policy would be "left to the states."  That will indeed happen in the short run. But such a state of affairs  might not last. Many Republicans have been  advocating nationwide bans on abortion,  including very sweeping ones that would forbid all abortions more than  six weeks into a pregnancy.  For their part, many Democrats, including  Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, back nationwide legislation protecting abortion rights.
 
 Would such laws be constitutional? I have written about this issue twice before (see  here and  here).  The bottom line is that current Supreme Court precedent likely would  enable Congress to ban most, if not all, abortions if it wanted to.  That's because the Court has endorsed a ridiculously broad  interpretation of Congress' powers to regulate interstate commerce. But  that precedent might be pared back, thanks in part to that unlikely  champion of abortion rights, Clarence Thomas.
 
 Here's why current precedent likely supports broad congressional power to restrict abortion:
 
 Under cases such as  Gonzales v. Raich (2005),  the Supreme Court has held that Congress' power to regulate interstate  commerce includes the authority to restrict almost any "economic  activity," so long as it has a "substantial effect" on interstate trade.  And [in Raich] "economic activity" is defined very broadly to  include anything that involves the "production, distribution, and  consumption of commodities." That definition allowed the Court to use  the Commerce Clause to uphold a federal ban on the possession of  marijuana that had never crossed state lines or been sold in any market  (even an intrastate one). Nearly all abortions involve the "consumption"  and "distribution" of commodities, such as medical supplies. In  addition, most abortions qualify as "economic" transactions because  doctors, nurses, and others are paid to perform them.However, Raich has been much criticized by conservative and  libertarian legal commentators, and is especially abhorred by Justice  Clarence Thomas. He has also suggested, in a 2007 concurring opinion,  that federal abortion restrictions may be beyond the scope of  congressional power under the Commerce Clause. It is possible that one  or more other conservative justices agree with him on this. A federal  abortion ban could, therefore, be struck down by a coalition of  conservative justices who oppose it on federalism grounds, and liberal  ones who believe it violates constitutional individual rights. I  outlined this scenario  here:
 One could argue that a federal law banning or severely restricting  abortions isn't "really" aimed at regulating interstate commerce. The  true motive would be to restrict abortion regardless of whether it  involved interstate transactions or not. But much the same can be said  for the marijuana ban upheld in Raich, and other federal laws  enforcing the War on Drugs. They go far beyond targeting actual  interstate trade in drugs, and instead forbid even in-state distribution  and possession of illegal narcotics.
 
 If, as is likely, the interstate abortion market expands in the wake of a Supreme Court decision overruling Roe,  Congress could claim that suppression of intrastate abortions is  necessary in order to enforce restrictions on those that involve  crossing state lines. If abortion is banned in State A, but legal in  neighboring State B, that creates an incentive for residents of A to  cross into B in order to get abortions - even if the feds enact a ban on  such crossing. That ban might be more effectively enforced if abortion  were illegal in B as well as A…..
 
 The Commerce Clause rationale for abortion restrictions might not  apply to abortions that are performed on a noncommercial basis by staff  who provide their services for free. But such cases are only a small  percentage of the total. Moreover, in Raich, the Court upheld  the ban on Angel Raich's possession of marijuana even though the  producers had in fact provided it to her for free. The theory was that  even such completely noncommercial production and distribution of an  illegal drug could impact the interstate market.
 
 These kinds of Commerce Clause arguments may strike some readers as  the kind of sophistry that gives lawyers a bad name. I sympathize with  that reaction! I hate these arguments myself, and have  long argued that Raich is a terrible decision that should be overruled. But this is exactly the sort of reasoning that prevailed in Raich, and provides a constitutional rationale for much of the federal War on Drugs.
 
 
 In  Gonzales v. Carhart  (2007), the Supreme Court upheld a federal restriction on late-term  "partial birth" against individual rights challenges. Justice Clarence  Thomas wrote  a concurring opinion  emphasizing the possibility that the law in question exceeds the scope  of congressional power under the Commerce Clause. Thomas previously  wrote  a forceful dissent in Gonzales v. Raich…. [In 2021], he  reiterated key elements of his critique of that decision, and urged the Supreme Court to reconsider… it….Cynics may say that Thomas isn't really sincere in his opposition to Raich  or his doubts about the constitutionality of federal abortion  restrictions. I  cannot know his true feelings for sure. But, as a  general rule, Thomas is known for being a man who says what he means and  means what he says. He even often gets criticized for his apparent  reluctance to compromise with other justices or respect their  sensibilities. I also see little motive for him to express the above  views if he doesn't really mean them. It's unlikely Thomas was trying to  curry favor with liberals. If he truly valued such favor, he would say  and do a lot of things differently.
 It's possible that one or more other conservative justices could join Thomas's reasoning.
 
 One can then envision federal abortion restrictions getting  invalidated by a coalition of conservative justices who believe they are  beyond the power of the federal government, and liberal justices who  object on individual-rights grounds. It is also possible (though less  likely) that some liberal jurists could endorse the federalism argument  against these restrictions. Liberal thinking on constitutional  federalism  shifted a good deal in recent years, and some of that shift  may go beyond "fair weather federalism" brought on by opposition to Trump's policies. It's also possible that either liberal or conservative judges will think of clever ways to limit the scope of Raich, even if it doesn't get overruled completely.
 
 
 Thus, if Congress does enact federal abortion restrictions, abortion  rights advocates may well have a good chance of stopping them by relying  on federalism arguments. In order to make the most of that opportunity,  they  would need to explicitly make that case and - ideally - ask the Court to overrule or severely limit Raich.
 
 Attacking Raich and other ultra-broad Commerce Clause  precedents may go against the  grain for some left-of-center abortions  rights advocates. But immigration advocates have  made a similar shift in sanctuary cities cases (with great success),  and the pro-choice legal community could follow their example. For some  pro-choicers - myself very much included! - the possibility that  reducing Commerce Clause authority would weaken the War on Drugs would  be a feature, not a bug.
 
 In addition to using the Commerce Clause, federal abortion  restrictions could also be enacted using Congress' spending power. I go  through some of the details  here:
 
 In addition to trying to directly regulate abortion by  using its Commerce Clause powers, Congress could also try to do so  indirectly by using its Spending Clause power to condition grants to  state governments. For example, it could enact legislation restricting  various types of health care grants to state governments unless the  latter ban or severely restrict abortion. These kinds of conditional  spending restrictions are subject to a number of constraints under  current Supreme Court precedent. The amount of money involved cannot be  so large as to be "coercive"; the conditions must be sufficiently  related to the purpose of the grant; and they have to be clearly stated  on the face of the law - not just inferred by the executive branch. The  Trump administration  ran afoul of all three of these restrictions during its campaign to cut federal funds to "sanctuary cities…."I would add that the requirements of relatedness and noncoercion set a  ceiling to the amount of pressure Congress could bring to bear in this  way. It couldn't deny affected states all or most federal health care  funding (that is precluded by  NFIB v. Sebelius,  which struck down as coercive a provision of the Affordable Care Act  that would deny all Medicaid funds to states that refuse to expand  Medicaid), and it cannot deny funds with little or no connection to  abortion.
 Much depends on the exact scope and wording of the legislation at  issue. Nonetheless, I think a carefully drafted conditional-spending  restriction on abortion rights could potentially jump through these  hoops. Then, blue states would face a choice of either losing some of  their federal health care grants or imposing abortion restrictions.
 
 The Spending Clause approach is less threatening to abortion rights  because states could…. avoid the conditions by refusing the federal  funds tied to them. In practice, such refusals of federal funds are very  rare. But a hot-button ideological issue like abortion might prove an  exception to that rule.
 
 
 Some conservatives have argued that a federal law banning abortion  might be authorized by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, rather than the  Commerce or Spending Clauses. But that would be a radical departure not  only from current Supreme Court precedent, but also from traditional  conservative originalist approaches to the Fourteenth Amendment.  Co-blogger Jonathan Adler explained why  here.
 
 Obviously, the above constraints on federal laws banning abortion  would also apply to federal laws seeking to protect it against the  states. In the wake of a decision overruling Roe, conservatives  and liberals alike may need to decide whether they care more about  preserving the autonomy of "their" states, or about retaining the power  to control the other side's states when their preferred party is in  power in Washington. In both cases, however, even if some would prefer  to preserve maximal federal power, there may well be others willing to  file federalism-based lawsuits, regardless of what their ideological  comrades think.
 
 Finally, I should note the scenarios discussed above may not come to  pass, because political obstacles may prevent Congress from enacting any  significant new abortion legislation, whether pro-life or pro-choice.  Doing so would likely require either a massive 60-vote Senate  supermajority or the abolition or limitation of the filibuster. On the  Republican side, federal abortion restrictions could be opposed by key  moderate senators, such as Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski (both of  whom are pro-choice).
 
 But while the obstacles to such legislation are significant, they may  not be insuperable. If you believe that abortion is murder, you might  well be willing to set aside the filibuster to ban it. Ditto if you  think it's a fundamental human right, and only federal legislation can  ensure its protection. If Roe does indeed get overruled, time  will tell if major new federal abortion legislation is politically  feasible or not. If it turns out that it is, there is a good chance it  might be successfully challenged on federalism grounds.
 
 UPDATE: Back in 2015, co-blogger  Jonathan Adler  also wrote a post explaining why federal abortion restrictions exceed  the scope of Congress' powers under the Commerce Clause. I think he's  overly optimistic when it comes to current precedent. But the kinds of  arguments he marshals are the sort that might well be accepted by  Justice Thomas and others if the issue were to come before the Supreme  Court.
 
 reason.com
 
 IMO its clear that abortion law is an area for the states not the federal government.  The constitution doesn't mention it so per the 10th amendment the feds have no authority over it.
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