The Daily Signal - 'History Is Clearly On The Pro-Life Side' : ADF Counsel Erin Hawley Breaks Down Upcoming Supreme Court Abortion Case
Episode Date: November 30, 2021The upcoming Supreme Court abortion case could be "the most important" case of "our lifetimes," predicts Alliance Defending Freedom senior counsel Erin Hawley. Hawley, mother to three and wife to Miss...ouri Sen. Josh Hawley, a Republican, discussed Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization during a podcast interview with The Daily Signal. The Supreme Court will begin hearing arguments in the highly divisive case on Wednesday. "History is clearly on the pro-life side, and there's no way you can make a historical argument for a deeply-rooted right to abortion," Hawley said. The Alliance Defending Freedom senior counsel explains the Mississippi law at the center of the Supreme Court case, how the justices may decide on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, why most abortion advocates don't properly understand Roe v. Wade, and more. We also cover these stories: President Joe Biden says he believes the United States will see cases of the new omicron variant in America sooner or later but says the variant is not a "cause for panic." Two major trials began Monday: the trial of Jeffrey Epstein's friend Ghislaine Maxwell, facing sex trafficking charges, and the trial of Jussie Smollett, the actor accused of faking a hate crime. The Students for Socialism group at Arizona State University is working to get Kyle Rittenhouse kicked out of the school after a jury in Kenosha, Wisconsin acquitted Rittenhouse of homicide charges. Enjoy the show! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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slash yes. Terms and conditions apply. This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, November 30th.
I'm Virginia Allen. And I'm Kate Trinco. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments for a case that could overturn Roe v. Wade. Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization is the biggest abortion case to come before the Supreme Court in years.
Erin Hawley, a senior attorney with Alliance defending Freedom, has followed the Dobbs case closely. She sits down with Mary
Margaret Olahan to discuss the details of the case and its implications.
But before we get to Mary Margaret's conversation, let's hit the top news stories of the day.
President Joe Biden says he believes we will see cases of the new Omicron variant in America sooner or later.
The president spoke to the nation about the new COVID-19 variant from the White House on Monday.
Biden said he had three central messages that he wanted to communicate to the American people
regarding the new variant per the Washington Post.
First, this variant is a cause for concern, not a cause for panic.
We have the best vaccine in the world, the best medicines, the best scientists, and we're learning more every single day.
The president added that secondly, the best protection against the variant is for Americans to get vaccinated and receive the booster shot.
And Biden said thirdly that in the event a new vaccine or booster is needed to fight the Omicron variant, the development of that vaccine or booster will be fast-tracked.
The president added that his team is developing plans for how to effectively fight COVID-19 through the winter months, specifically saying he does not plan to implement more lockdowns.
Thursday, I'll be putting forward a detailed strategy outlining how we're going to fight COVID this winter.
not with shutdowns or lockdowns, but with more widespread vaccinations, boosters, testing, and more.
More than 71% of American adults are vaccinated, and more than 86% of seniors are vaccinated.
Two major trials began Monday.
Gilae McSwaleigh, friend and associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was charged in 2020 with enticing a minor to travel to engage in criminal sexual activity,
transporting a minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, and perjury in connection
with a sworn deposition among other charges per the Justice Department. Maxwell has pleaded not guilty,
and on Monday the jury was selected for her trial, which will be held in Manhattan. She could
spend up to 70 years in jail if found guilty. Meanwhile, Jesse Smollett, the actor accused of
faking a hate crime, is also beginning his trial. Back in 2019,
Smollett said two men used racial and homophobic slurs against him, and that one of them had shouted,
this is MAGA country. But as the story gained national attention, two brothers who were extras on
Empire, the TV show Smollett was on at the time claimed they had been hired by Smollett to fake the hate
crime. Per the Associated Press, Smollett, who has pleaded not guilty, could face up to three
years in jail if found guilty. The Students for Socialism Group
Arizona State University is working to get Kyle Rittenhouse kicked out of school.
Rittenhouse currently attends Arizona State University online.
Only a week and a half ago, the 18-year-old was acquitted on homicide charges by a jury in
Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Rittenhouse shot three people and killed two during riots in Kenosha in August of 2020.
The jury determined that Rittenhouse acted in self-defense.
Still, students for socialism at Arizona State are called.
calling on the school to remove Rittenhouse and issue a public statement against him.
The far-left group is also demanding that the university shift campus police funding to support the multicultural center and establish a care center on campus.
The socialist students plan to hold a protest against Rittenhouse on their campus tomorrow.
As of Monday afternoon, Arizona State University has yet to make a public comment in response to the students for socialist's demand.
Stay tuned for Mary Margaret's conversation with Attorney Aaron Hawley as they break down what you need to know about the Dobbs case.
My name is Claire Marker.
I'm Jonathan Ski.
And I'm Natasha Tuneowski.
And we're an intern at the Heritage Foundation.
The Heritage Foundation Young Leaders Intern Program gives college students and recent graduates the opportunity to work for America's leading conservative think tank.
Intern opportunities span from research and writing to filming.
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there with all the instructions on how you can apply today.
Joining me today is Erin Hawley, mother of three, wife to Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri,
and Senior Appellate Council of Alliance Defending Freedom.
Erin, thank you so much for joining me today.
Thanks so much for having me.
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will be hearing a major abortion case,
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization,
a case involving a Mississippi law that bans abortion after 15 weeks.
Aaron, to start us off, can you explain what this law entails?
Absolutely.
So I think this case could be the most important of our lifetimes.
And the reason being is that Mississippi has passed a really,
common sense law. So Mississippi restricts abortions, as you said, after 15 weeks. It has robust
exceptions for the health and life of the mother. It allows months for women to get an abortion.
It is consistent with over 90% of the abortion laws nationwide. And it applies, I think, most
importantly, at a time in which at 15 weeks, an unborn baby can open and close her fists,
she can open and close her eyes, she can hear her mother's voice, and she can quite likely fill
pain. And despite all of this, the lower court struck Mississippi's law down under Roe and Casey.
So why is this case such a big deal right now? Why are we seeing so many abortion advocates
freaking out about this? So many pro-life advocates making a huge deal out of this? So it's really the
first time in 30 years in which the Supreme Court has really had to confront the realities of Roe and
Casey head on. And the realities under those laws are that it allows states to allow abortion
up until the very last minute of pregnancy.
And it forbids states from protecting unborn life until viability, which is about 22 or 24 weeks.
So it's sort of this one-way ratchet where states cannot do anything about protecting unborn life until viability.
But states, on the other hand, could choose to allow abortions really late in the term.
And this is the first chance the court has had in 30 years to revisit Rowan Casey.
And to look at those opinions for just a second, they're likely,
the worst Supreme Court opinions that are still on the books. And the reason for this is that they
make up from sort of whole constitutional cloth this right to an abortion. You can hardly find
a constitutional scholar who would actually say the Roe v. Wade is rightly decided. And yet here we are
50 years later saddled with its consequences. And science has progressed quite a bit since Roe v.
Wade. What do we know now about an unborn baby at 15 weeks? Absolutely. As the Chief Justice said,
in a different context, you know, the history didn't stop in 1973. So if you look at an ultrasound
from 1973 when Roe was decided, you really can't see much at all. And today, in contrast,
we know a tremendous amount about human development and development of the unborn. Again,
at 15 weeks when the Mississippi law applies, a baby can smile. She can move about in her mother's
womb. She can stretch. She can hiccup. Her internal organs are,
are there and functioning.
And she's in every way a fully formed human being.
And again, this is at 15 weeks.
And currently states cannot protect unborn babies until 22 or 24 weeks along when their
development has progressed even beyond these points.
You've previously written that, quote, the days of Roe v. Wade may finally be numbered.
And that really stood out to me.
What happens if Roe is overturned?
What does a world without Roe v. Wade look like?
So that's a great question.
And so because the Constitution says nothing about Roe, it would return the matter to the democratic process.
And so then you would have states who are able to debate sort of the policy matter of abortion.
And you would allow states to protect unborn life.
So states like Mississippi, other states would be able to protect life when it is so clearly human.
And we've seen a lot of abortion advocates paint this picture of chaos and danger and destruction and restriction if Roe v.
Wade is overturned. Is that accurate? I don't think so. There are laws that would come into effect
if Roe versus Wade were overturned. And almost all of those laws have exceptions for the life
and health of the mother, for situations like rape and those sorts of things. So you are going to
have common sense laws coming out of the state legislatures who are able to both protect the
life of the unborn as well as to protect women's health. So I think you're going to see just good
laws coming out of our state legislatures. So for example, in California, you might see some very
progressive abortion laws, whereas in Texas, you might see very pro-life laws. Absolutely. So you're
going to have different laws in different states, but you're going to have the people be able to
have a say in that. And you're going to have advocates for pro-life advocates that will go to California
and show pictures of ultrasounds of babies at 15 weeks and say, you know, you might want to
reconsider these sorts of late-term abortions.
That's really interesting.
So it would change the ballgame for advocacy against abortion.
Absolutely.
And why do you think that the Supreme Court took up this case in the first place?
That's a really good question.
The Dobbs case actually has a really interesting history.
The case was on the Supreme Court docket for nearly a year, which is almost unheard of.
So the case kept being the term as relisted.
So the court kept reconsidering whether to decide this case over and over again.
And then after Justice Amy Coney-Barritt was confirmed to the court, the court finally took the case.
And you have to have four votes at the Supreme Court to grant cert or in order to hear a case.
So presumably she made a difference.
And so I think this is really good news for Mississippi.
It seems like you at least have four votes that are interested in revisiting the Supreme Court's abortion jurisprudence and this idea that maybe they think the common sense law in Mississippi should withstand constitutional scrutiny.
And is there anything in the Constitution that establishes a right to an abortion?
Absolutely not.
Well, we hear this so much.
We hear that so much from abortion advocates.
Why is that?
So I think it's sort of become entrenched in advocacy for pro-abortion proponents, but the fact of the matter is it's just untrue.
And again, you could hardly find a constitutional scholar who will say that Roe v. Wade is rightly decided.
And if you think of some of the really influential liberal law professors, in fact, they come up the other way.
There was a professor named John Hart Eli, and he called Roe bad because it's bad constitutional law and didn't even give the sense, didn't even have an obligation to try to be constitutional law.
And you have Professor Larry Tribe, again, another influential liberal law professor who talks about Roe sort of coming up like a hologram from emanations in penumbra is of various amendment.
So there's this real sense in which the court simply made up the right to an abortion.
It's nowhere in the Constitution.
And the court since then has sort of reaffirmed that if the court is going to make up stuff,
then at least it needs to be deeply rooted in our nation's history or tradition.
So this is under the 14th Amendment.
And there's a 14th Amendment interest in liberty.
And sometimes the court finds that certain things are protected within this liberty interest.
But again, the right to abortion has no sort of tether to our nations in history.
In fact, in 1868, when the 14th Amendment was passed, about 30 of 30, of 36.
states had restrictions on abortion. So there simply is no historical right to an abortion,
and nor is it located anywhere in the Constitution's text structure or history.
So 30 out of 37 states had restrictions on abortion when Roby Wade was passed.
Sorry, when the 14th Amendment was passed. When the 14th Amendment was passed. That's not something
you hear talked about very much. No, not at all. And the reason being is that the history is
clearly on the pro-life side. And there's no way you can make a historical argument for a deeply
rooted right to abortion. And I think Roe v. Wade is often misrepresented. You see abortion advocates
now, they say if Roe v. Wade is overturned, that's the end of abortion in America. You'll be in a back alley
with a hanger. Why is Roe v. Wade misrepresented in this way? And what does Roe v. Wade actually
mean for abortion? So Roe v. Wade takes the matter out of the democratic process. So instead of state
legislatures like Mississippi, state legislatures like California, deciding what is the best way to protect women
and children in their state, you have a majority of justices. In Roe, it was seven men who decided
that women should have this right to abortion. And as a woman, as a working mom, I sort of find
their language distressing. So Justice Blackman and Roe actually said that maternity would force
upon women this bleak and distrustful life. And I think that's just not a proper view of motherhood
or womanhood. And it's something at least that should be debated in the public branches and the
democratically elected branches and not decided by a majority of Supreme Court justices.
So how do you think the justices will decide on this case? So it's always tough to predict
Supreme Court opinions. But looking at the tea leaves, it looks like there's a couple of ways
the court could come out. I would be surprised if the court does not uphold Mississippi's law.
There was no reason to take the case. There was not any splits among the lower courts. They
were all in consistent agreement that a state could not do what Mississippi did. It could not even
lacked a common sentence law that restricted abortion at 15 weeks when a baby can do all these
things we talked about. So the court didn't have to take the case. There was no sort of
controversy that it needed to clear up. So the fact that the court took the case indicates
that they're interested in at least upholding Mississippi's law. They could do this by saying,
for example, that the law does not impose an undue burden. If you look at the percentage of women
that get abortions before 15 weeks, I think it's something like 95% close to that.
So the court could say this is not an undue burden.
Mississippi's law makes sense.
It protects both women and children.
It's fine.
Hopefully the court will say a lot more than that.
Hopefully the court will say, look, Roe was wrong.
The day was decided.
And if you look at these factors that are called stare decisis factors, they just reveal
that that decision has gotten more wrong over time.
As you said, science didn't stop in 1973.
We know a lot more about unborn life.
And one thing that's really compelling to me is if you look at the Roe opinion itself, it talks about the potentiality of life.
Now, we know that's nonsense today.
The human life at 15 weeks is absolutely human life.
It's not a potential life.
So these things have changed since Roe.
So I think it's possible and hopefully likely that the court will go ahead and overrule Roe versus Wade.
And currently there's a large number of justices on the Supreme Court who were appointed by Republican presidents.
That doesn't mean they're going to rule the way conservatives want them to.
Do you have any thoughts on whether these justices are open to doing something as big as overturning Roeby Wade?
So I think it depends upon the justice.
So these justices, as you said, they're six appointed by Republican presidents.
But not all of these justices think exactly alike.
So I think you have a few justices who are comfortable being quite bold and would overturn Roe v.
Wait tomorrow.
I think you have some other justices who are a little more incremental and would consider maybe
some more intermediate steps. But I think when confronted with the sort of the enormity of the
errors made in Roe, as well as the scientific evidence and the changes since Roe, I'm hopeful that
even the incremental justices will see that the best course is just to reverse Roe.
And I hear that Justice Kavanaugh is a big question mark in this case. Would you say that's
accurate? And how do you think he'll decide on this case? So one thing that's interesting about Justice
Kavanaugh is he came up from the D.C. Circuit. And the D.C. Circuit does not hear many abortion
cases because they don't hear cases that come up from the states. So Justice Kavanaugh does not have a long
record on abortion. I think he only had one abortion case actually in his entire tenure on the D.C.
Circuit. And he came out the right way on that case. It was a pro-life ruling on his part.
But we don't have a lot of data on that. Again, I hope that when Justice Kavanaugh is confronted
by all the problems with Roe and all of the scientific advancement, that he will be a vote to
reverse, but we don't have a lot of data.
His confirmation hearing was accompanied by very, very angry sentiment about abortion.
Abortion advocates said that Kavanaugh coming to the Supreme Court would mean the end of Roby
Wade.
Do you anticipate any kind of great backlash against him or against the court if that should happen?
You know, I think, of course, abortion advocates would be.
upset if Roe versus Wade were overturned, but then that would return to the Democratic process
where it should be. The fact of the matter is the Supreme Court has removed this issue from the
Democratic branches where it should be. And one other thing I should say about the Republican-appointed
justices is that most of them consider themselves to be originalist and textualist. And there's no
question if you're an originalist or a textualist that the right result is to reverse Roe v. Wade
in a follow-along case called Casey.
And the reason being is, as we've discussed,
there's no right to an abortion
in the text structure or history of the Constitution
and for original justices, the buck stops there.
Then there shouldn't be a constitutional rule on this.
It should be returned to the states
where states are allowed to protect both unborn children and mothers.
And what about Amy Coney-Barritt?
We know that she has a past history
of making very pro-life comments in her personal life.
Do you think that will reflect in this case?
So I don't think Justice Barrett will allow her personal opinions to influence her judging.
But I do think what will influence her judging, again, is her commitment to originalism and constitutionalism.
So again, it's this idea that if there's going to be a right to an abortion, you need to tether that somehow to constitutional text structural history.
And that just can't be done here.
So because of her committed views to constitutionalism and to originalism, I'm hopeful that she too will vote over over.
So what should we be on the watch for as this week progresses?
So I think the oral argument will be illuminating. It will be interesting to see what the justices' questions are.
And I think we'll get a sense of, you know, what might be motivating them to vote one way or the other.
You know, are the justice is concerned about reliance interests that women might have?
Or on the other hand, are those reliance interests sort of offset by the availability of really affordable, really effective contraception that didn't exist in 1973 and 1992?
You know, are the justices really concerned that Roe has no basis in the Constitution?
So I think we'll get to see sort of where their heads are at a little bit.
All right.
Well, Aaron, thank you so much.
This has been a fascinating conversation.
And we're really looking forward to seeing where things go with this.
Absolutely.
Thanks for having me.
And that'll do it for today's episode.
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