Saturday, June 25, 2022

Supreme Court ruling returns authority and power to the people

 

A view of the US Supreme Court buildingA view of the US Supreme Court building  (2022 Getty Images)

Roe v. Wade: Supreme Court ruling a ‘vote of confidence in American people’

As the US Supreme Court overturns the so-called right to abortion, Elizabeth Kirk says the decision represents a vote of confidence in the American people to decide the issue democratically.

By Devin Watkins

The United States Supreme Court ruled 5-4 on Friday in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case in favor of overturning the 1973 ruling in Roe v. Wade, which had asserted a supposed constitutional "right" to abortion. 

Following the ruling, Elizabeth Kirk, J.D., a researcher and lecturer at Columbus School of Law at the Catholic University of America and Director of the Center for Law and the Human Person, explained the decision to Vatican News.

“The case is both monumental and also very simple. It simply holds that the US Constitution does not confer a right to abortion, and it doesn’t in any way shape what abortion policy should be hereafter. Rather, it returns the authority to regulate abortion to the people and their elected representatives.”

Returning authority to voters to overcome division

According to Dr Kirk, Friday’s ruling hands voters the power to decide for themselves whether or not abortion should be legal.

“What this decision does is show enormous confidence in the American people to resolve this question that does divide people through the democratic process.”

Before this ruling, the United States was an outlier in the world regarding the “radical nature of our abortion rights,” as well as the way in which voters had no say in policy-making on the issue.

Previously, said Dr Kirk, the “Supreme Court took it out of the hands of the people, and throughout the world this is an issue that people resolve through their own legislative processes.”

Now, she added, elected representatives at the state and national levels will have the chance to “work through these questions in a way that will hopefully bring us to better consensus.”

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