There was a strong response to the decision shortly after it was issued. The Catholic Church condemned the ruling. Prominent organized groups that responded to
Roe include
National Association for the Repeal of Abortion Laws, which became the National Abortion Rights Action League in late 1973 to reflect the Court's repeal of restrictive laws, and the
National Right to Life Committee. The legal scholar
Ronald Dworkin described it as "undoubtedly the best-known case the United States Supreme Court has ever decided."
Support for Roe and abortion rights 1960s–1970s In the 1960s, there was an alliance between the
population control movement and the
abortion-rights movement in the United States. The cooperation was mostly due to
feminists who wanted some of the popularity already enjoyed by the population control movement. In addition, population control advocates thought that legalizing abortion would help solve the coming population crisis that demographers had projected. Previously, public support for abortion rights within the population control movement instead came from less established organizations such as
Zero Population Growth. An exception was
Planned Parenthood-World Population, which supported repealing all laws against abortion in 1969. Together, population control and abortion rights advocates voiced the benefits of legalized abortion such as smaller welfare costs, fewer illegitimate births, and slower population growth.
H. Rap Brown denounced abortion as "black genocide", and
Dick Gregory said that his "answer to genocide, quite simply, is eight Black kids and another one on the way." Soon after
Roe, the population control movement suffered setbacks, which caused the movement to lose political support and instead appear divisive. On June 27, 1973, a lawsuit was filed concerning
the Relf sisters, 14-year-old Minnie Lee and her 12-year-old sister Alice Lee. A worker at a federally-funded family planning clinic lied to their illiterate mother, saying they would get birth control shots. Instead, the Relf sisters were sterilized without their knowledge or consent. During the next fifteen months, 80 additional women came forward about their forced sterilizations, all belonging to minority races. Concerns rose that abortions would also become compulsory. The final plan omitted fertility targets and instead stated, "A population policy may have a certain success if it constitutes an integral part of socio-economic development." As members questioned the political benefits of population control rhetoric, the abortion-rights movement distanced itself from the population control movement. In October 1973, Robin Elliott circulated a memo to other Planned Parenthood members concerning opposition to "Planned Parenthood's credibility in its reference to the population problem".
21st century , where many speakers bemoaned a looming threat to
Roe Into the 21st century, advocates of
Roe describe it as vital to the preservation of
women's rights, personal freedom, bodily integrity, and privacy. Advocates have also reasoned that access to safe abortion and reproductive freedom generally are
fundamental rights. Supporters of
Roe contend that even if abortion rights are also supported by another portion of the constitution, the decision in 1973 accurately founds the right in the Fourteenth Amendment. Others support
Roe despite concern that the fundamental right to abortion is found elsewhere in the Constitution but not in the portions referenced in the 1973 decision. They also tend to believe that the power balance between men and women is unequal, and that issues like access to birth control and political representation affect women's equality. Opinion polls in late 2021 indicated that while a majority of Americans oppose overturning
Roe, a sizable minority opposed overturning
Roe but also desired to make abortion illegal in ways that
Roe would not permit. This was attributed to poll respondents misunderstanding
Roe v. Wade or misinterpreting the poll question. 2018–2019 polls showed that while 60 percent of Americans generally support abortion in the first trimester, this drops to 20 percent for the second trimester, even though
Roe protects the right to abortion until the last weeks of the second trimester, and at the same time 69 percent said they would not like to see
Roe overturned, compared to 29 percent who said they would like to see
Roe overturned. Polls also found that men and women have similar views on abortion, which are linked to how people think about motherhood, sex, and women's social roles; supporters of
Roe and abortion rights tend to see women's ability to make decisions about their bodies as fundamental to
gender equality. A January 2022
CNN poll found a 59% majority of Americans want their state to have laws that are "more permissive than restrictive" on abortion if
Roe is overturned, 20% want their state to ban abortion entirely, and another 20% want it to be restricted but not banned. A May 2022
Gallup poll showed that 50% of Americans thought abortions should be legal under certain circumstances, with 35% saying it should be legal under any circumstances, and 15% saying it should be illegal in all circumstances, as well as a record number of Americans who identify as
pro-choice. Before
Roe was overturned in ''
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, a majority of Americans thought that Roe'' was safe and would not be overturned. Since the draft's leaks showed
Roe to be overturned in
Dobbs, as happened in June 2022, abortion became a concern and a very important issue for Democrats, who previously lagged behind Republicans on this; some Americans, in particular liberals but also a few conservatives, may have become more aware of the popular support for
Roe, which they had previously understated. In June 2022, Gallup reported that a 61% majority of Americans say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, while 37% say abortion should be illegal in all or most cases. It also recorded the highest partisan divide since 1995,
Opposition to Roe Condemnation by Catholic Bishops The Catholic Church condemned the ruling by the Supreme Court. Krol called the ruling "an unspeakable tragedy for this nation" that "sets in motion developments which are terrifying to contemplate." This particular position is indicated by the use of rhetoric concerning "
reproductive justice", which replaces earlier rhetoric centered around "choice", such as the "pro-choice" label. Reproductive justice proponents contend that factors permitting choice are unequal, thus perpetuating oppression and serving to divide women. Reproductive justice advocates instead want abortion to be considered an affirmative right that the government would be obligated to guarantee equal access to, even if the women seeking abortions are nonwhite, poor, or live outside major
metropolitan areas. With a broader interpretation of the right to an abortion, it would be possible to require all new
obstetricians to be in favor of abortion rights, lest as professionals they employ
conscience clauses and refuse to perform abortions. In the 1989 decision of
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, the Supreme Court ruled against an affirmative right to
nontherapeutic abortions and noted that states would not be required to pay for them.
Opposition to both Roe and abortion rights Every year, on the anniversary of the decision, opponents of abortion march up
Constitution Avenue to the
Supreme Court Building in
Washington, D.C., in the
March for Life. About 250,000 people attended the march until 2010. Estimates put the 2011 and 2012 attendances at 400,000 each, and the 2013 March for Life drew an estimated 650,000 people. The march was started in October 1973 by
Nellie Gray and the first march took place on January 22, 1974, to mark the first anniversary of
Roe v. Wade. Opponents of
Roe say that the decision lacks a valid constitutional foundation. Like the dissenters in
Roe, they maintain that the Constitution is silent on the issue, and that proper solutions to the question would best be found via state legislatures and the legislative process, rather than through an all-encompassing ruling from the Supreme Court. Another argument against the
Roe decision, as articulated by former president
Ronald Reagan, is that, in the absence of consensus about when meaningful life begins, it is best to avoid the risk of doing harm. In response to
Roe v. Wade, most states enacted or attempted to enact laws limiting or regulating abortion, such as laws requiring
parental consent or parental notification for minors to obtain abortions; spousal mutual consent laws;
spousal notification laws; laws requiring abortions to be performed in hospitals, not clinics; laws barring state funding for abortions; laws banning
intact dilation and extraction, also known as partial-birth abortion; laws requiring waiting periods before abortions; and laws mandating that women read certain types of literature and watch a
fetal ultrasound before undergoing an abortion. In 1976, Congress passed the
Hyde Amendment, barring the federal government from using
Medicaid to fund abortions except in cases of rape, incest, or a threat to the life of the mother. The Supreme Court struck down some state
restrictions in a long series of cases stretching from the mid-1970s to the late 1980s, but upheld restrictions on funding, including the Hyde Amendment, in the case of
Harris v. McRae (1980). Some opponents of abortion maintain that
personhood begins at
fertilization or
conception, and should therefore be protected by the Constitution;
Responses within the legal profession Liberal and
feminist legal scholars have had various reactions to
Roe, not always giving the decision unqualified support. One argument is that Justice Blackmun reached the correct result but went about it the wrong way. Another is that the end achieved by
Roe does not justify its means of
judicial fiat.
David Garrow said that the decision in
Roe and also
Doe v. Bolton "owed a great amount of their substance and language" to Justice Blackmun's
law clerks, George Frampton and Randall Bezanson. He thought the extent of their contributions were remarkable, and that the clerks exhibited an "unusually assertive and forceful manner" in voicing their views to Justice Blackmun. In his research, it was the earliest significant example he found of this behavior pattern, which grew more consistent later on. In Garrow's evaluation, the clerks' contributions were "historically significant and perhaps decisive" in shaping the two decisions. In response to Garrow,
Edward Lazarus said that Justice Blackmun's later clerks like himself did not need as much direction on reproductive rights since they had Justice Blackmun's prior opinions to draw from. Lazarus thought that on at least some occasions when legal formulations were created for opinions to be published in Justice Blackmun's name, the justice himself was not engaged in originating every significant thought pattern that they employed. Lazarus agreed that Garrow's depiction of how the trimester framework came about was an example of one of these occasions. Justice
John Paul Stevens, while agreeing with the decision, suggested that it should have been more narrowly focused on the issue of privacy. According to Stevens, if the decision had avoided the trimester framework and simply stated that the right to privacy included a right to choose abortion, "it might have been much more acceptable" from a legal standpoint. Before joining the Court, Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg criticized the decision for venturing "too far in the change it ordered". Had the decision been limited in scope to only permit abortion during certain circumstances, "physicians might have been less pleased with the decision, but the legislative trend might have continued in the direction in which it was headed". After becoming a Supreme Court justice, Ginsburg faulted the Court's approach for being "about a doctor's freedom to practice his profession as he thinks best... It wasn't woman-centered. It was physician-centered." Justice Ginsburg thought that
Roe was originally intended to complement Medicaid funding for abortions, but this did not happen. Yes, the ruling about that surprised me. Frankly I had thought that at the time
Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in populations that we don't want to have too many of. So that
Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding for abortion. Which some people felt would risk coercing women into having abortions when they didn't really want them. But when the court decided
McRae, the case came out the other way. And then I realized that my perception of it had been altogether wrong.
Watergate prosecutor
Archibald Cox thought the "failure to confront the issue in principled terms leaves the opinion to read like a set of hospital rules and regulations whose validity is good enough this week but will be destroyed with new statistics upon the medical risks of child birth and abortion or new advances in providing for the separate existence of a fetus. Neither historian, nor
layman, nor lawyer will be persuaded that all the prescriptions of Justice Blackmun are part of the Constitution." In a highly cited
Yale Law Journal article published in the months after the decision, the American legal scholar
John Hart Ely criticized
Roe as a decision that was disconnected from American constitutional law. American constitutional law scholar
Laurence Tribe said: "One of the most curious things about
Roe is that, behind its own verbal smokescreen, the substantive judgment on which it rests is nowhere to be found." Centrist-liberal law professors
Alan Dershowitz,
Cass Sunstein, and
Kermit Roosevelt III have also expressed disappointment with
Roe v. Wade.
Jeffrey Rosen, as well as
Michael Kinsley, echo Ginsburg, arguing that a legislative movement would have been the correct way to build a more durable consensus in support of abortion rights.
William Saletan wrote, "Blackmun's papers vindicate every indictment of
Roe: invention, overreach,
arbitrariness,
textual indifference."
Benjamin Wittes argued that
Roe "
disenfranchised millions of conservatives on an issue about which they care deeply." Edward Lazarus, a former Blackmun clerk who "loved
Roes author like a grandfather", wrote: "As a matter of constitutional interpretation and judicial method,
Roe borders on the indefensible.... Justice Blackmun's opinion provides essentially no reasoning in support of its holding. And in the almost 30 years since
Roe announcement, no one has produced a convincing defense of
Roe on its own terms."
Richard Epstein thought that the majority opinion relied on a book written by
William Lloyd Prosser about
tort law when it stated that it "is said" recovery of
damages was allowed "only if the fetus was viable, or at least quick, when the injuries were sustained". He compared this to what was in fact written in the book, which was that "when actually faced with the issue for decision, almost all of the jurisdictions have allowed recovery even though the injury occurred during the early weeks of pregnancy, when the child was neither viable nor quick."
Matt Bruenig, lawyer and founder of the
People's Policy Project, criticized
Roe as being "weaker than normal" and observed that similarly broad interpretations of the Constitution could be used to argue the opposite outcome, saying "right now we have a constitutional right to an abortion—you could also constitutionally ban abortion. If you wanted to, someone could bring a case, file it in a district court, hit the appeal button twice, and then if you get five judges together, the opinion would be the easiest thing in the world to write. You would say, 'the Fourteenth Amendment protects the right to life, liberty, and property without due process and all that shit. So we're looking at that, and we think that abortion takes a life and so we think that in fact states may not permit abortion'. So you could constitutionally ban it and say that no state or federal government is allowed to legalize abortion". The assertion that the Supreme Court was making a legislative decision is often repeated by opponents of the ruling. The "viability" criterion was still in effect, although the point of viability changed as medical science found ways to help
premature babies survive.
Later responses by those involved Harry Blackmun Justice Blackmun, who authored the
Roe decision, subsequently had mixed feelings about his role in the case. During a 1974 television interview, he stated that
Roe "will be regarded as one of the worst mistakes in the court's history or one of its great decisions, a turning point." In a 1983 interview for a newspaper journalist, he responded that he was "mildly annoyed at those, law professors included, who personalize it" because "it was a decision of the court, not my decision. There were seven votes." As a Methodist, he felt hurt that Methodist pastors wrote condemning letters to him, but as time passed, the letters did not hurt "as much anymore". In defense he responded, "People misunderstand. I am not for abortion. I hope my family never has to face such a decision", noting that "I still think it was a correct decision" because "we were deciding a constitutional issue, not a moral one." He described
Roe as "a no-win case" and predicted that, "fifty years from now, depending on the fate of the proposed constitutional amendment, abortion probably will not be as great a legal issue. I think it will continue to be a moral issue, however." I remember that the old Chief appointed a screening committee, chaired by Potter, to select those cases that could (it was assumed) be adequately heard by a Court of seven. I was on that little committee. We did not do a good job. Potter pressed for
Roe v. Wade and
Doe v. Bolton to be heard and did so in the misapprehension that they involved nothing more than an application of
Younger v. Harris. How wrong we were. In 1991, he regretted how the Court decided to hear
Roe and
Doe in a televised interview: "It was a serious mistake... We did a poor job. I think the committee should have deferred them until we had a full Court." In 1992, he stood by the analytical framework he established in
Roe during the subsequent
Casey case. He often gave speeches and lectures promoting
Roe v. Wade and criticizing
Roes critics.
Norma McCorvey A few years after the Supreme Court decided
Roe,
Norma McCorvey made a claim—which she recanted many years later—that she had a nightmare about "little babies lying around with daggers in their hearts". She said this was the first of recurring
nightmares that kept her awake at night. She became worried and wondered, "What really, had I done?" and "Well, how do they kill a baby inside a mother's stomach anyway?" McCorvey later claimed: I couldn't get the thought out of my mind. I realize it sounds very naïve, especially for a woman who had already conceived and delivered three children. Though I had seen and experienced more than my share of the world, there were some things about which I still didn't have a clue—and this was one of them. Ironically enough, Jane Roe may have known less about abortion than anyone else. McCorvey joined with and accompanied others in the anti-abortion movement. During this time, McCorvey said that she had publicly lied about being raped and apologized for making the false claim. Norma McCorvey became part of the movement against abortion from 1995 until shortly before her death in 2017. In 1998, she testified to Congress: In 2002, along with
Sandra Cano (Mary Doe) from
Doe v. Bolton and
Bernard Nathanson, a co-founder of NARAL Pro-Choice America, McCorvey appeared in a television advertisement intended to persuade the
Bush administration to nominate Supreme Court Justices who would oppose abortion. As a party to the original litigation, she sought to reopen the case in
U.S. District Court in Texas to have
Roe v. Wade overturned. However, the
Fifth Circuit decided that her case was moot, in
McCorvey v. Hill. In a concurring opinion, Judge
Edith Jones agreed that McCorvey was raising legitimate questions about emotional and other harm suffered by women who have had abortions, about increased resources available for the care of unwanted children, and about new scientific understanding of fetal development. However, Jones said she was compelled to agree that the case was moot. On February 22, 2005, the Supreme Court refused to grant a
writ of certiorari, and McCorvey's appeal ended. In an interview shortly before her death, McCorvey stated that she had taken an anti-abortion position because she had been paid to do so and that her campaign against abortion had been an act. She also stated that it did not matter to her if women wanted to have an abortion and they should be free to choose.
Rob Schenck, a
Methodist pastor and activist who once had anti-abortion views stated that he and others helped entice McCorvey to claim she changed sides and also stated that what they had done with her was "highly unethical" and he had "profound regret" over the matter.
Frank Pavone, a priest with whom McCorvey talked after the interview, reflected after her death that "There was no indication whatsoever, at the end of her life," that she had given up her pro-life positions. Pavone stated that following the interview, McCorvey talked positively with him about a message she wanted him to convey at the next March for Life. The message concerned encouraging young people to oppose abortion.
Sarah Weddington After arguing in
Roe v. Wade at the age of 26,
Sarah Weddington was elected to the
Texas House of Representatives for three terms. Weddington also was
general counsel for the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, an assistant to President
Jimmy Carter, lecturer at the
Texas Wesleyan University School of Law, and speaker and
adjunct professor at the
University of Texas at Austin. In a 1993 speech for the Institute for Educational Ethics in Oklahoma, Weddington discussed her conduct during
Roe and stated, "My conduct may not have been totally
ethical. But I did it for what I thought were good reasons." In 1998, she said that the lack of doctors to abort fetuses could undermine
Roe: "When I look back on the decision, I thought these words had been written in granite. But I've learned it was not granite. It was more like sandstone. The immediate problem is, where will the doctors come from?" Weddington died on December 26, 2021. == Subsequent judicial developments ==