The Roe vs. Wade decision, which declared abortion to be a constitutional right, was overturned by the Supreme Court of the United States by a 6-3 decision. With its most recent ruling, the pro-life vs. pro-choice argument has been brought up not just in the United States but also across the globe. Joe Biden, the president of the United States, has also publicly denounced the Supreme Court’s decision. Now, some could argue that Joe Biden’s comments were just a little bit motivated by politics. as Donald Trump appointed the Supreme Court justices who made the decision. However, the folks’ rage is genuine.
History of Abortion Rights in the US
Abortion-related social and legal regulations may be traced back to the colonial era. Before “quickening,” or the time when a pregnant woman feels the foetus move, usually at about four or five months, abortion was permitted in the British colonies. State laws banning abortion did not first arise until the 1820s, and the earliest versions of these laws were unclear and not properly implemented. In order to stop the selling of chemical mixtures intended to cause abortions, several regulations were created as poison control measures. Slaves were under the control of their masters, who often desired their subjugated captives to reproduce as many children as possible. As a result, the history of abortion regulation is entwined with racism. Black women and other women of color still today.
Despite the movement’s opposition to abortion, the demand for birth control was regarded as a challenge to male domination, and efforts to regulate and limit women to the traditional childbearing role included banning abortion. Additionally, it was a method for males in the newly formed medical profession to usurp midwives, whom they detested for executing abortions, and take over the very lucrative industry of birthing. Attacks against the right to an abortion were also motivated by racism and white supremacy. The eugenics movement fueled worries about the disappearance of the white identity. Attempts to outlaw abortion were driven in the late 1800s by rising immigration, particularly that of Catholic immigrants, and the dropping birthrate among white Protestant women born in the United States. Black midwives were frequently the object of specific censure from White doctors.
Roe vs. Wade: A landmark judgement
In its historic Roe vs. Wade ruling from January 22, 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court declared all current criminal abortion prohibitions unconstitutional. According to the Court, every individual has a basic “right to privacy” that is “based on the concept of personal liberty” as stated in the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Court evaluated the right to privacy of a pregnant person against the interests of the state in promoting mother health and foetal survival. The Supreme Court ruled that the decision to have an abortion must be made by the person who is pregnant during the first trimester, in consultation with their doctor; that the state may regulate abortion in the second trimester in ways that are reasonably related to maternal health; and that the state may regulate or prohibit abortion in the third trimester, except where necessary to preserve the person’s life or health.
While many people were happy and glad that abortion was now legal nationwide, others were horrified and sought to limit access by petitioning state legislatures. Abortion became as a divisive topic at this time. While the Democratic party backed abortion rights, the Republican party embraced an anti-abortion stance. Although Southern Baptists initially backed the Roe vs. Wade abortion rights, the issue quickly became a major political issue for the growing number of white evangelical Christians, who rallied to limit access to abortion and allied themselves with the Republican party. After their support for racial segregation lost its viability as a wedge issue, they needed an effective unifying topic, which is why their language and policies changed.
Parental Consent and Bellotti v. Baird
The Supreme Court held in Bellotti v. Baird (1979) that states might require a child to get parental consent for an abortion. However, the Court mandated that states offer a judicial bypass option, whereby minors could ask a judge to grant them permission to have an abortion without telling their parents, provided they could demonstrate that they were mature enough to make their own choice or that the abortion was in their interests.
Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization
The United States Supreme Court eliminated constitutional safeguards for the right to an abortion on June 24, 2022. The landmark decisions in Roe vs. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1986) were reversed by the wide ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (1992). A basic constitutional privilege was curtailed for the first time in Supreme Court and American history.

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