Supreme Court of Florida Hears Abortion Case
This morning I listened to the oral arguments at the
Florida Supreme Court in Planned Parenthood of Southwest & Central Florida
v. Florida. The case involves a Florida state constitutional challenge to
Florida’s ban
on abortion after fifteen weeks. The stakes are high: if the Supreme Court
upholds the law, then a subsequent law
that bans abortion after six weeks goes into effect thirty days later. Since women
often do not realize they are pregnant that early, the Court’s ruling may
essentially eliminate the right to abortion in Florida.
Unfortunately, it is widely expected that the Florida
Supreme Court will uphold the law. Like the U.S. Supreme Court, the Florida
Supreme Court has taken a hard turn to the right. All seven Justices have been
appointed by Republicans, five of them by Gov. DeSantis. The question, then, is
perhaps not whether the Florida Supreme Court will eliminate abortion rights
but how.
Unlike the U.S. Constitution, the Florida Constitution
explicitly protects the right to privacy. Article I, section 23 of
Florida Constitution, added by a 1980 voter referendum, states: “Right of
privacy: Every natural person has the right to be let alone and free from
governmental intrusion into the person’s private life.” It is hard to imagine a greater government intrusion
into your private life than being forced to continue an unwanted pregnancy. Indeed,
the Florida Supreme Court has made this exact point in 1989 when holding that
the right to privacy creates a right to abortion. “Florida's privacy provision
is clearly implicated in a woman's decision of whether or not to continue her
pregnancy. We can conceive of few more personal or private decisions concerning
one's body that one can make in the course of a lifetime.” In
re T.W., 551 So. 2d 1186, 1192 (Fla. 1989). In 2017, the Florida Supreme Court affirmed both
that the right to privacy covers abortion andthat abortion regulations would
trigger strict scrutiny – the highest level of scrutiny courts apply to
constitutional rights. Gainesville
Women Care, LLC v. State, 210 So. 3d 1243 (Fla. 2017).
How, then, might the Florida Supreme Court justify
overruling its precedent? One series of questions from the Justices suggests
that some might prefer to dodge the substantive issue and rule on procedure
rather than the merits. There were many questions, for example, about third
party standing. My apologies to civil procedure enthusiasts, I did not take as
many notes on this line of questioning.
Alternatively, the Florida Supreme Court seemed to be trying
out the argument that the original public meaning of the right to privacy does not
extend to a right to abortion because there was little discussion in the
legislature or popular press about abortion at the time the Florida
Constitution was amended, and surely there would have been if the right to
abortion was understood to be on the table. In other words, as one justice
asked, if the right to privacy included a right to an abortion, why weren’t there
op-eds to that effect? This argument dovetails
with the state attorney’s claim, which is that voters in 1980 were concerned
only with informational privacy.
Whitney White, representing Planned Parenthood and its
allies, did a superb job parrying all these questions. There is no need to consider what the people
of Florida thought because the language of the amendment is unambiguous. In any
event, by 1980—a few years after Roe v. Wade was decided—it was well understood
by the general public that “right to privacy” encompassed the right to
abortion. Certainly there was no doubt of this in contemporaneous Florida legal
decisions, which also contribute to the original public meaning. The topic of
abortion rights was not hotly debated in Florida at the time of the amendment because
the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade had settled the issue at the
federal level. Moreover, in order to overrule precedent, this Florida Supreme Court
must find that the its prior decisions were clearly erroneous. The able Ms. White also observed that adopting
the narrow reading urged by the state would destabilize many other rights that
have relied on a broader understanding of the right to privacy, such as
parental rights.
At one point, Chief Justice Muniz tipped his hand when he expressed
concern that reading the right to privacy as protecting abortion would "essentially
take a whole class of human beings and put them outside of the protection of
the law, essentially, in the sense that if the legislature wants to protect
those human beings, they are precluded by the constitution of Florida from
doing that.” Personally, I might have been tempted to point out that his concern
rests on a religious proposition (that life begins at conception) that is not
even close to being universally shared. But rather than challenge this
viewpoint, Ms. White instead argues that revoking abortion rights and
compelling pregnancy would allow the state to force someone to take increased
risk and harm for the sake of others, which is unprecedented.
These are all excellent arguments and will likely fail. There
is a campaign to put
abortion back on the ballot in Florida, this time explicitly (or rather, even
more explicitly). If you are registered in Florida, by all means sign the
petition and make sure to vote next November.