The Biggest Lie Roiling the Election
Abortion rights do not hinge on who is elected president, nor on which party controls Congress.
The biggest lie roiling the election is Vice President Harrisâs claim that President Trump will ban abortion nationwide.
Abortion rights do not hinge on who is elected president, nor on which party controls Congress. The issue is out of their hands.
Wherever you live, the state legislators elected in your own state will determine your abortion rights. That is what the Supreme Court ruled in 2022, when it overturned Roe v. Wade.
As a pro-choice woman, I understand some voters are putting aside concerns about inflation, the border, foreign policy and other issues out of fear they or their daughters wonât have freedom of choice.
They deserve the truth, but theyâre not getting it.
At a rally at Houston on Friday with rock star Beyonce, Ms. Harris pumped up the fear, telling blue-state and swing-state women voters that âif you think you are protected from a Trump abortion ban because you live in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Nevada, New York or California, please know no one is protected.â
Thatâs 100 percent false. Instead of fact-checking, though, the liberal press is letting that lie do its dirty work, frightening women to vote for Ms. Harris.
Trump has vowed to veto a national ban on abortion. You donât have to rely on his word, though.
Americaâs Constitution sets up dual powers, where the states have authority over the health and welfare of residents, and the federal government has only limited, enumerated powers, such as levying taxes and regulating interstate commerce but not regulating most health care matters.
Any effort by Congress to ban abortions would likely be overturned by the courts. That includes Senator Grahamâs Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, which would make it a crime to abort a fetus after 20 weeks.
Likewise for the Womenâs Health Protection Act of 2022, which would guarantee access to abortion, preempting state laws to the contrary.
This bill goes so far beyond Congressâ enumerated powers that its authors omitted the âfindingsâ section where theyâre supposed to describe Congressâ authority to pass it. There is none.
Same is true for Ms. Harrisâ pledge to codify Roe. Thatâs unlikely to fly, short of a constitutional amendment.
In 1905, when a Cambridge, Massachusetts, man challenged a local smallpox vaccine requirement, the Supreme Court ruled that states could require residents to be vaccinated.
The court never has recognized a federal power to do so, even during Covid. Vaccination laws vary from state to state, just like abortion laws.
At one time the court allowed Congress to stretch the meaning of the Commerce Clause like a rubber band to authorize federal meddling into virtually anything. No more. In a string of rulings, the court reversed that.
Then in 2007, the court upheld the Partial-Birth Abortion Act, not based on Congressâ commerce power but only on Roe, a ruling now overturned.
In 2012, when the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act, the majority relied on Congressâ taxing power and expressly repudiated the idea that the Commerce Clause could be used as the basis for health legislation.
No surprise, then, that in 2022 when the court struck down Roe, it entrusted abortion to the voters of each state, not Congress.
Pro-choice voters need to know action on reproductive rights has shifted to the state capitols from Washington, D.C. Ten states have abortion measures on the ballot this November.
Itâs possible to support increasing access to abortion procedures, like Floridaâs measure does, and still vote for Trump.
The next battle is over abortion pills, or mifepristone, which now account for 63 percent of terminated pregnancies, according to the Guttmacher Institute.
Fourteen states ban it, and three of these states â Missouri, Kansas, and Idaho â are suing the Federal Drug Administration to make it harder for women to abort their own pregnancies.
Trump said âthe federal government should have nothing to do with this issue,â infuriating pro-lifers but staying true to the idea that state voters will decide.
Thatâs the legal reality. Instead of hanging with Beyonce, Ms. Harris should take a refresher course on the Constitution and drop the scare tactics.
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