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Wednesday, April 17, 2024
Blaming the courts for everything (Updated)
A week late, but a thought I have been carrying about the Arizona Supreme Court decision allowing the state to enforce a restrictive 1864 abortion law in the face of a 2022 15-week ban; thus pre-15-week abortions lawful under the 2022 law are not lawful if they violate the 1864 law. The majority relied on a construction clause in the 2022 law stating that it did not repeal the 1864 law and read the provisions as distinct ways of criminalizing the same conduct. The dissent read the construction clause as part of the legislative history rather than the text and thus not a proper consideration on an unambiguous law, demanding a clearer statement from the legislature (or the public) about intent to keep the 1864 law in use. Both interpretations are reasonable, although (knowing nothing about Arizona law) I find the majority more persuasive.
No one is happy with the decision, but for interesting reasons.
The left views this as another Republican-dominated court attacking abortion on "vibes" and with total disregard for law. No one acknowledges that this is not stand-alone constitutionality but trying to act on legislative enactment. And they direct no ire at the Arizona legislature for keeping the 1864 law around, recodifying it in 1977, and expressing the intent in 2022 that it remain on the statute books. On that last point, Arizona enacted the 2022 law several months before Dobbs, while a longstanding Roe-based injunction prohibited enforcement of the 1864 law. Legislators likely put the non-repeal provision to make a show of having a near-ban on the books for the hoped-for time when Roe was overturned. They did not count on it happening so soon.
The right--including the Republican governor who signed and Republican legislators who supported the 2022 law--is mad that the court did not bail them out of their bad--intentional or otherwise--lawmaking. The decision thrust abortion onto the national radar. It forces them to defend their anti-abortion actions from two years ago or to feign shock and indignity that the court would have taken seriously their express recognition of the 1864 law.
But the criticisms from both sides share a common theme--it is all on the courts. The left expects legislatures to attack abortion and demands the courts join rights-holders in resisting those legislative encroachments on constitutional rights; the right expects legislatures to engage in performative legislation attacking abortion and demands courts ensure that nothing they do has unpopular real-world consequences. Pre-Dobbs, it worked for both sides on the extremes--courts stopped enforcement of the worst laws, allowing some room for the abortion right while allowing legislators to posture and perform. Dobbs changes the consequences. But, as the Arizona case shows, not the target of criticism.
Update: Paul reminds me of Adam Unikowsky as an exception--a lefty arguing majority probably got it right and that Arizona Republicans should shut up. This is a great analysis.
Update: I confess to coming at this from a unique-for-a-liberal space: Zombie laws are easily reanimated and immediately enforceable when the state of constitutional law changes and the court lifts any injunction, unless the legislature expressly or impliedly repealed. Yes, 19th-century abortion restrictions--including those enacted before women had a national right to vote--are valid and enforceable, absent legislative action of some kind. Of course, intellectual honesty trumps partisanship here at Prawfs.
Posted by Howard Wasserman on April 17, 2024 at 09:43 AM in Howard Wasserman, Judicial Process, Law and Politics | Permalink
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