To go to the main index on Partial-Birth
Abortion, click here.
To go to the NRLC home page, click
here.
To view or download the entire Supreme
Court opinion (PDF file), click
here.The following release was issued by the
National Right to Life Committee (NRLC) in Washington, D.C., on
Wednesday, April 18, 2007, at 1 PM EDT. For further information,
send e-mail to
Legfederal@aol.com, or visit the NRLC website at
http://www.nrlc.org/
National Right to Life applauds
U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act
WASHINGTON (April 18, 2007) -- The U.S. Supreme
Court today rejected a legal challenge to the federal
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, allowing the law to go into
effect for the first time since it was signed by President
George W. Bush in 2003.
"Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, and
their allies blocked this law for 12 years -- but finally, it is
illegal in America to mostly deliver a premature infant before
puncturing her skull and removing her brain, which is what a
partial-birth abortion is," commented Douglas Johnson,
legislative director for the National Right to Life Committee
(NRLC).
Writing for a 5-4 majority, Justice Anthony
Kennedy wrote, "The Act proscribes a method of abortion in which
a fetus is killed just inches before completion of the birth
process. . . Congress determined that the abortion methods it
proscribed had a 'disturbing similarity to the killing of a
newborn infant.' . . ." The majority ruled that a general ban
on the method is permissible and does not violate the general
"abortion right" enunciated in past decisions such as Roe v.
Wade (1973) and Casey v. Planned Parenthood
(1992).
NRLC, the nation's major right-to-life
organization, led the coalition that resulted in enactment of
the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in 2003, after an eight-year
fight. President Bill Clinton vetoed the ban twice. When it
passed the Senate in 2003, it was over the nay vote of Senator
Hillary Clinton.
The federal law bans "partial-birth abortion," a
legal term of art, defined in the law itself as any abortion in
which the baby is delivered feet-first "past the [baby's] navel
. . . outside the body of the mother," or "in the case of a
head-first presentation, the entire fetal head is outside the
body of the mother," before being killed. The complete official
text of the law, in a searchable format, is
here.
In recent months, some commentators, including
Linda Greenhouse of The New York Times and Kenneth Jost
of Congressional Quarterly, have argued that the term
"partial-birth" is misleading because the method is usually used
months before the end of a full-term pregnancy. (It is most
often used in the fifth and sixth months, but sometimes later.)
These objections rest on a baffling failure to recognize
that legal "live births" commonly occur long before full term --
indeed, "live births" are commonplace even early in the fifth
month of pregnancy. Legally, under the laws of virtually every
state and under federal law, once a human is entirely outside
the mother and draws breath, or shows other signs of life such
as heartbeat or movement of voluntary muscles, a live birth
has occurred, and all the protections of law attach — whether or
not the baby is “viable” (capable of long-term survival). At
the stages of development at which most partial-birth
abortions are performed, the great majority of babies would be
legal “live births” if they were expelled by spontaneous
premature labor, and many would be long-term survivors. For
further discussion of the relationship between the legal
definition of "live birth" and the legal definition of
"partial-birth," click
here.
In February 1997, Ron Fitzsimmons, the
executive director of the National Coalition of Abortion
Providers, told the New York Times that “in the
vast majority of cases” the method is used on “a healthy
mother with a healthy fetus that is 20 weeks or more along”
(New
York Times, Feb. 26, 1997). Twenty weeks is halfway
through a full-term pregnancy — the middle of the fifth
month.
ADDITIONAL DOCUMENTATION
The NRLC website contains the Internet's most
expansive archive of documents pertaining to all facets of the
debate over partial-birth abortion,
here.
Any journalist or editorialist examining the
issue of partial-birth abortion will benefit from reading "Partial-Birth
Abortion: Misconceptions and Realities," a memo written by
NRLC Legislative Director Douglas Johnson. This memo addresses
common misconceptions and misinformation about partial-birth
abortion, with links to primary documents, including interviews
with partial-birth abortionists and investigative reports in
American Medical News, the New York Times, PBS,
and other news media. The memo addresses these topics: the
actual language and legal intent of the bill; why "partial-birth
abortion" is a necessary and appropriate legal term of art that
fits into the framework of existing law regarding what
constitutes a "live birth"; how the media's use of the nebulous
label "late-term abortion" distorts the debate over the law;
whether President Bush's statement (November 5, 2003) that
partial-birth abortion is violence directed against those who
are "inches from birth" is medically and legally accurate; and
polls of doctors, obstetricians, nurses, and the general public
regarding the ban.
The memo also discusses how
documented medical illustrations of two different abortion
methods can allow the public to better evaluate claims and
counterclaims on what the law actually covers and does not
cover.
A collection of key documents (some of them real
eye-openers) pertinent to various medical claims surrounding
partial-birth abortion are posted
here.
During the summer of 2004, U.S. District Judge
Richard Casey presided over a trial in New York in one of the
three legal challenges to the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act (National
Abortion Federation v. Gonzales), during which he directly
questioned a number of abortionists regarding how partial-birth
abortions are performed. Attorney Cathy Cleaver Ruse's
distillation of that revealing testimony, published in the
Spring 2005 issue of the Human Life Review under the title
"Partial-Birth Abortion on Trial," is posted in PDF format
here.
To go to the main index on Partial-Birth
Abortion, click here.
To go to the NRLC home page, click
here.
To view or download the entire Supreme
Court opinion (PDF file), click
here.
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