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For immediate release:
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
For more information:
Derrick Jones, (202) 626-8825
mediarelations@nrlc.org
NATIONAL
RIGHT TO LIFE RESPONDS TO
SOTOMAYOR NOMINATION
WASHINGTON – The National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC), the federation of right-to-life
organizations in all 50 states, issued the following
statement regarding President Obama's nomination of
Judge Sonia Sotomayor to fill the seat on the U.S.
Supreme Court that is being vacated by the impending
retirement of Justice David Souter. This statement may
be attributed to NRLC Legislative Director Douglas
Johnson.
What we have
seen of Judge Sotomayor's record so far sheds little
light on her views regarding how the Constitution bears
on the powers of elected lawmakers to protect the right
to life of unborn children.
Members of the
Senate should not be pressured to act on this nomination
with undue haste. We believe it is critical that
senators thoroughly explore whether Judge Sotomayor
believes that Supreme Court justices have the right to
override the decisions of elected lawmakers on such
issues as partial-birth abortion, tax funding of
abortion, and parental notification for abortion.
Moreover, in
the years ahead debates will intensify on other public
policy issues bearing on the right to life –for example,
the status of humans who are created by human cloning,
or the permissibility of abortion as a method of
preventing the birth of a child of an undesired
sex. Does Judge Sotomayor believe that Supreme Court
justices have the right to declare that the
Constitution empowers them to impose their own opinions
on all such matters, or is she willing to allow the
decisions of elected lawmakers to stand except where
they violate a clear and explicit prohibition in the
actual Constitution?
There are
currently four justices on the U.S. Supreme Court who
apparently believe that their strong pro-abortion
opinions should override the judgments of elected
lawmakers, despite the complete lack of support for
their position in the text and history of the
Constitution. In its most recent ruling dealing with
abortion and the rights of unborn children,
Gonzales v. Carhart,
on April 18, 2007, a five-justice majority upheld the
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act. On that occasion, four
justices dissented – including Justice David Souter –
and argued for a constitutional doctrine that would have
invalidated the ban on partial-birth abortions and also,
by implication, condemned virtually any other law or
government policy intended to discourage abortion. If
the dissenters’ position became the position of the
majority of the Supreme Court, various types of laws
that have been deemed permissible under
Roe v. Wade
could be invalidated by judicial decree, perhaps
including the Hyde Amendment (restricting government
funding of abortion) and parental notification laws.
It is, then,
very appropriate for senators to press for Judge
Sotomayor's views on the analysis adopted by the
dissenters in
Gonzales, an
analysis that could bar virtually all limitations on
abortion.
Pro-life
concerns are reinforced by the knowledge that Judge
Sotomayor has been nominated to the Supreme Court by a
president who himself criticized the Supreme Court
majority for upholding the ban on partial-birth
abortion, who previously had opposed a bill to recognize
all babies born alive during abortions as fully
protected by law, and who endorsed a proposed federal
law (the "Freedom of Choice Act") that has as its major
purpose the invalidation of virtually all of the types
of abortion regulations that have been upheld by the
Supreme Court as consistent with
Roe v.
Wade.
The National
Right to Life Committee is the nation’s largest pro-life
group with affiliates in all 50 states and over 3,000
local chapters nationwide. National Right to Life works
through legislation and education to protect those
threatened by abortion, infanticide, euthanasia and
assisted suicide.
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