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Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:36 PM Jun 2012

Please answer this question "yes" or "no."

No prevarication, no "weasel words," no justification, no "no, but's," just a single word response "yes" or "no."

Would you tolerate a Democratic nominee for the Supreme Court who said in a confirmation hearing that "there is no Federal Constitutional right to an abortion"?

One word only: yes or no.


44 votes, 2 passes | Time left: Unlimited
Yes
10 (23%)
No
34 (77%)
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Disclaimer: This is an Internet poll
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Please answer this question "yes" or "no." (Original Post) Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 OP
No TeamPooka Jun 2012 #1
No. Aristus Jun 2012 #2
Yes. nt AJTheMan Jun 2012 #3
Thank you for your honesty. (nt) Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #4
Don't feed the trolls lumberjack_jeff Jun 2012 #5
Answer the question. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #8
No. Meaning "no, I won't answer your question." lumberjack_jeff Jun 2012 #9
Okay. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #10
So you don't like Kagan. lumberjack_jeff Jun 2012 #14
Fallacy. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #17
The jurist is not anti-gay...nt SidDithers Jun 2012 #28
So ProSense Jun 2012 #51
It's not a "right to abortion" but a "right to privacy" HubertHeaver Jun 2012 #6
No prevarication. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #7
You are barking up the wrong tree. HubertHeaver Jun 2012 #12
Then would you tolerate a Democratic nominee who would say Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #13
Now you are changing the original statement. HubertHeaver Jun 2012 #22
Thank you. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #31
I took your bait. As someone up-thread implied, HubertHeaver Jun 2012 #47
Three reasons. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #61
This poll isn't about abortion at all... SidDithers Jun 2012 #26
A simple yes or no answer... kentuck Jun 2012 #16
No prevarication. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #18
I would not tolerate such a divisive question... kentuck Jun 2012 #24
Answer the question. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #34
Your question is not worthy of a yes or no answer. kentuck Jun 2012 #35
Then you have no right to discuss Elena Kagan. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #36
That is not what you asked in your poll. kentuck Jun 2012 #37
I don't think that word means what you think it means kdmorris Jun 2012 #48
I was about to post the same thing. Chiyo-chichi Jun 2012 #56
I think that was what my caffeine deprived brain kdmorris Jun 2012 #57
Answer this question first... SidDithers Jun 2012 #11
No. Chorophyll Jun 2012 #15
You don't. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #19
I believe I just did that. Chorophyll Jun 2012 #21
My apologies. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #23
A couple of things dsc Jun 2012 #20
Not entirely. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #29
The civil right of a person to own and posses a firearm for self defense (per Heller) is attacked kelly1mm Jun 2012 #43
To be honest? Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #60
And to clarify and emphasize: Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #33
I agree GCP Jun 2012 #52
Nope. And I find the entire idea absurd that they would need say anything... clang1 Jun 2012 #25
Pass.... this is a moot and irrelevant question Gman Jun 2012 #27
No prevarication. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #30
Sorry to disrupt your black and white world Gman Jun 2012 #42
That word does not mean what you think it does. Ikonoklast Jun 2012 #50
I know which word I used Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #58
HRC on Elena Kagen... SidDithers Jun 2012 #32
+100 n/t Tx4obama Jun 2012 #39
The HRC does not speak for the majority of LGBT Americans n/t FreeState Jun 2012 #41
Neither does Pab...nt SidDithers Jun 2012 #55
The Beatles! TlalocW Jun 2012 #38
No. EFerrari Jun 2012 #40
Yes. Nye Bevan Jun 2012 #44
You're good Brother Buzz Jun 2012 #46
Thank you. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #59
The question is ambiguous. geek tragedy Jun 2012 #45
I agree with that Douglas Carpenter Jun 2012 #66
This is like ProSense Jun 2012 #49
Not every good thing is a Constitutional right Macoy51 Jun 2012 #54
I voted 'no' but obviously it is not for me to 'tolerate' another country's judges or otherwise LeftishBrit Jun 2012 #53
No nominee would say it to begin with... cynatnite Jun 2012 #62
Yet, a nominee DID say that Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #63
That's disingenuous... cynatnite Jun 2012 #64
Civil rights are civil rights Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #65
You are still being disingenuous... cynatnite Jun 2012 #79
I can see there is no discussing things logically with you. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #82
That is not true... cynatnite Jun 2012 #84
No Bettie Jun 2012 #67
No JonLP24 Jun 2012 #68
This is sort of a trick question, I think. I voted 'no' then realized coalition_unwilling Jun 2012 #69
As you doubtless know, you give too little info for a rational choice to be made dmallind Jun 2012 #70
Just answer the question. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #71
Just ask a question that makes sense dmallind Jun 2012 #76
It makes sense. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #78
No, but the Supremes don't usually check with me. Vidar Jun 2012 #72
Yes One_Life_To_Give Jun 2012 #73
Yes sarisataka Jun 2012 #74
Kick for Elena Kagen... SidDithers Jun 2012 #75
It depends. AngryAmish Jun 2012 #77
This is really about gay marriage... cynatnite Jun 2012 #80
Not at all. Pab Sungenis Jun 2012 #81
You cannot expect to get the answer you want when you are being so disingenuous. n/t cynatnite Jun 2012 #83
I have no idea whether or not abortion is a constitutional right RZM Jun 2012 #85
 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
5. Don't feed the trolls
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:42 PM
Jun 2012

As you know, DU'ers are expected to be supportive of choice, which suggests an impure motive for your poll.

As tempting as it is to take your bait, some words need to be defined, such as "tolerate".

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
10. Okay.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:48 PM
Jun 2012

So you now have no right to criticize me for being offended when my rights are trampled upon for expediency's sake when others' rights should automatically disqualify a nominee.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
14. So you don't like Kagan.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:50 PM
Jun 2012

Fine.

So are you saying we should vote Republican instead?

Door #1 or door #2. Pick only one.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
17. Fallacy.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:52 PM
Jun 2012

I am not saying we should vote Republican. I'm saying that voting Democratic did not keep an anti-gay jurist off the bench.

ProSense

(116,464 posts)
51. So
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 07:03 AM
Jun 2012

"I am not saying we should vote Republican. I'm saying that voting Democratic did not keep an anti-gay jurist off the bench. "

...you just decided to mount a bogus campaign against Kagan by asking a trick question about abortion?

HubertHeaver

(2,522 posts)
6. It's not a "right to abortion" but a "right to privacy"
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:43 PM
Jun 2012

It is a medical procedure and its use comes under patient-doctor privilege. It is none of the states' business.

HubertHeaver

(2,522 posts)
12. You are barking up the wrong tree.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:49 PM
Jun 2012

The right to abortion exists under the right to privacy. Defend the right to privacy.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
13. Then would you tolerate a Democratic nominee who would say
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:50 PM
Jun 2012

"There is no Federal Constitutional right to privacy?"

Yes or no.

HubertHeaver

(2,522 posts)
22. Now you are changing the original statement.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:55 PM
Jun 2012

The right to privacy is in the federal constitution. A nominee who would state otherwise would be wholly unqualified to sit as a judge at any level.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
31. Thank you.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:01 AM
Jun 2012

The right to privacy is derived from the Court the same way the right to marry was derived. The right of privacy through Roe v. Wade and the right to marriage through Loving v. Virginia.

So where do you come down on a nominee who says there is no Constitutional right to same-sex marriage?

HubertHeaver

(2,522 posts)
47. I took your bait. As someone up-thread implied,
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 03:55 AM
Jun 2012

your motives were indeed disingenuous.

As I pointed out before, there is not a constitutional right to abortion; rather a constitutional right to freedom of religion, speech, and assembly, the right to privacy, freedom from unlawful and unethical abuse of power by a governing body, freedom from violation of civil liberties and unlawful expansion of governmental power. The constitution also grants equal rights and protection under the law.

The law does not enumerate what you are allowed to do but does enumerate what you cannot do (and the penalties if you do).

Why did you ask about abortion when your real question was about the fourteenth amendment and same-gender marriage?

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
61. Three reasons.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 09:57 AM
Jun 2012

First, both abortion and same-sex marriage are extremely controversial issues in the political arena.

Second, the reasoning in Roe and in Loving are basically rooted in the same place: the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. Neither right (privacy nor marriage) is expressly stated in the Constitution but are recognized as fundamental rights which cannot be unduly restricted.

Third, the Democratic Party (although some refuse to admit it) have made abortion a litmus test. And rightly so. We wouldn't and shouldn't dream of nominating someone who did not believe in the Constitutional underpinnings of Roe.

Yet because it's politically expedient the right of LGBT*.* to equal protection under the law gets thrown under the bus by a Democratic appointment to the Court and a Democratic President does nothing.

When Bush nominated someone to the Court who turned out to be less than 1,275% against abortion and activists complained, he yanked her nomination quickly. When Obama nominated someone to the Court who disdained a fundamental right when applied to LGBT*.* she was lauded and confirmed.

I will never forgive Obama for not pulling her appointment, and I will never forgive my Senators for voting to confirm her. I won't necessarily vote against them but I will never be able to fully trust them again.

And for all of the people on here who voted "no," none of you have any right to ever tell me that we have to vote for Obama because otherwise the Supreme Court is lost for a generation. Thanks to Obama, the Court already is lost for at least a generation as far as LGBT*.* people are concerned. And the more you hammer away at the Court as an issue, the further you drive the wedge between the Party and a loyal part of its base who were gleefully discarded until they turned their back on the Party at the midterms.

kentuck

(111,111 posts)
16. A simple yes or no answer...
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:52 PM
Jun 2012

would be an incomplete response. Just because the Constitution does not state a " right to an abortion" does not mean it does not grant other rights that might include the right to privacy and the right to an abortion.

Unfortunately, does not serve a positive purpose by answering yes or no.

kentuck

(111,111 posts)
37. That is not what you asked in your poll.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:09 AM
Jun 2012

It sounded sort of like, "Would you like to kiss my ass?" Answer yes or no!

kdmorris

(5,649 posts)
48. I don't think that word means what you think it means
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 06:45 AM
Jun 2012

prevarication means lying... which none of them are doing. Perhaps you were looking for "discussing" or "quibbling"?

dsc

(52,173 posts)
20. A couple of things
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:53 PM
Jun 2012

One, a person can be pro choice but not think there is a federal right to abortion embedded in the right to privacy. So one can answer the poll question yes and still be a member of DU in good standing.

Two, this poll is intended to be an analogy of Kagan's statement in regards to marriage equality.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
29. Not entirely.
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:59 PM
Jun 2012

It's intended to show how some people's civil rights are seen as important enough to form litmus tests, and others are not.

Any Democratic nominee who would say that there is no right to abortion (or for the purists, a right to privacy) would have their nomination pulled so quickly that the Senators' heads would be forced back from the contrails.

But let someone say that there is no right to same-sex marriage, they not only don't get pulled but get praised and confirmed.

As far as I'm concerned, any nominee who is against anyone's civil rights not only doesn't deserve confirmation they don't deserve to be a Democrat.

And so far only three people on all of DU have a right to oppose me on that without being a hypocrite.

Update: Now it's four.

kelly1mm

(4,748 posts)
43. The civil right of a person to own and posses a firearm for self defense (per Heller) is attacked
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 01:02 AM
Jun 2012

here on DU all the time. Obviously, some peoples' civil rights are more worthy of protection is the eyes of many here. For some that is marriage equality, others privacy, others RKBA. I wish it would be ALL civil rights that were respected as you seem to call for.

Do you think that a nominee who is against the civil right to firearm ownership does not deserve confirmation or to be considered a Democrat?

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
33. And to clarify and emphasize:
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:03 AM
Jun 2012

I'm not suggesting that people who answer "yes" don't belong on DU.

 

clang1

(884 posts)
25. Nope. And I find the entire idea absurd that they would need say anything...
Sun Jun 24, 2012, 11:55 PM
Jun 2012

It's a womans body. Period.

Ikonoklast

(23,973 posts)
50. That word does not mean what you think it does.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 07:01 AM
Jun 2012

"Equivocation" is a more correct word; you are asking people not to lie when asking them not to prevaricate in answering.

But, there is no specific Constitutional guarantee to an abortion, there is, however, a right to privacy specifically enumerated within that document under which right having an abortion is legally allowable.

Any jurist answering differently would be in error.

SidDithers

(44,228 posts)
32. HRC on Elena Kagen...
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:02 AM
Jun 2012
http://www.hrc.org/press-releases/entry/human-rights-campaign-congratulates-elena-kagan-on-her-confirmation-as-asso

Human Rights Campaign Congratulates Elena Kagan on Her Confirmation as Associate Justice of the Unit

"We commend the Senate for confirming Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court. She has demonstrated a understanding of the need for equality for all Americans and her record indicates she may be more familiar with how laws and policies affect the LGBT community than any previously confirmed Justice," said HRC President Joe Solmonese

WASHINGTON - The Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) civil rights organization, today applauded the United States Senate for confirming Solicitor General Elena Kagan as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The Senate voted 63-37 with 5 Republicans voting in favor of her confirmation and 1 Democrats voting against it.

"We commend the Senate for confirming Solicitor General Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court," said HRC President Joe Solmonese. "She has demonstrated an understanding of the need for equality for all Americans and her record indicates she may be more familiar with how laws and policies affect the LGBT community than any previously confirmed Justice."

On July 1, after thoroughly reviewing her record and her responses to questions posed by the Senate Judiciary Committee, HRC formally announced its endorsement of Kagan. In her testimony before the Committee, she indicated an understanding of the important issues facing many Americans, including those who are LGBT. Her opening statement pointed out what she saw as the command to every justice - the pursuit of Equal Justice Under Law - and argued for a "fair shake for every American." She also took the opportunity to clarify a statement from her Solicitor General confirmation regarding the lack of a constitutional right to marry for same-sex couples as simply an assessment of where the law currently stands.

Kagan's record shows she has worked on LGBT issues during many phases of her career. While in the Clinton White House, she was involved in LGBT issues ranging from expanding hate crimes legislation to preventing employment discrimination to increasing funding for HIV and AIDS prevention and treatment. As Dean of Harvard Law School, Kagan supported the LGBT community and passionately defended the school's sexual orientation anti-discrimination policy when it conflicted with the discriminatory "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" law - a law she called "a profound wrong - a moral injustice of the first order."

HRC is particularly pleased to see the fourth woman to serve on our nation's highest court and the third woman sitting on the current Supreme Court, marking the highest representation of women on the Court in its history. In addition, she will be the only member of the current Court to have not previously served as a judge - which ends the recent historical anomaly of having a Court comprised entirely of justices that entered the Court from the bench. This increased diversity will help provide greater perspectives to the Court, particularly regarding how the law affects everyday people, including LGBT Americans.

Learn more about federal judicial nominations and follow our work on these crucial issues on HRC's Equality in the Courts by visiting: www.HRC.org/EqualityInTheCourts.

The Human Rights Campaign is America's largest civil rights organization working to achieve lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality. By inspiring and engaging all Americans, HRC strives to end discrimination against LGBT citizens and realize a nation that achieves fundamental fairness and equality for all.


Sid

Nye Bevan

(25,406 posts)
44. Yes.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 01:13 AM
Jun 2012

Roe versus Wade does not establish a constitutional right to an abortion. It does provide that there is a right to an abortion prior to the fetus being viable (able to live independently).

So a nominee could state unequivocally that they support Roe v Wade and would vote to uphold it, while still not accepting that there is a Federal Constitutional right to abortion.

Oh, and BTW, in 2008 we "tolerated" a Democratic Presidential candidate who, at the time, believed that "marriage is between a man and a woman..... God is in the mix".

Brother Buzz

(36,507 posts)
46. You're good
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 01:24 AM
Jun 2012

I was going to respond that this was a trick question and the correct answer was yes AND no.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
59. Thank you.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 09:43 AM
Jun 2012
Oh, and BTW, in 2008 we "tolerated" a Democratic Presidential candidate who, at the time, believed that "marriage is between a man and a woman..... God is in the mix".


You helped make my point. Some rights are more equal than others with our party, sadly.
 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
45. The question is ambiguous.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 01:24 AM
Jun 2012

1). It could be interpreted as "what do you believe the law should be" vs " what is the current state of the law.".

2). There is no constitutional right to a lot of things that wind up covered by the right to privacy.

3). Legal interpretation is not the same as political agenda or values.

Douglas Carpenter

(20,226 posts)
66. I agree with that
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:32 AM
Jun 2012

There is no constitutional right to quality healthcare for all citizens. But I think there should be.

ProSense

(116,464 posts)
49. This is like
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 06:51 AM
Jun 2012

a RW dishonest poll. Death Panels!

Clearly most people don't have a clue that there is no Constitutional right to an abortion.

So are you attempting to trap people into supporting a POV by asking a trick question?

Disingenuous at best.

 

Macoy51

(239 posts)
54. Not every good thing is a Constitutional right
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 08:39 AM
Jun 2012

“Clearly most people don't have a clue that there is no Constitutional right to an abortion.”

Not every good thing is a Constitutional right. Every issue is not a binary, constitutional right vs. unconstitutional. Can you imagine a nation that only allowed things listed? A poll asking if single player health care is a Constitutional right is not the same as asking if I support it.


Macoy

LeftishBrit

(41,219 posts)
53. I voted 'no' but obviously it is not for me to 'tolerate' another country's judges or otherwise
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 07:25 AM
Jun 2012

However, I would be deeply suspicious of such a person, in any country.

cynatnite

(31,011 posts)
62. No nominee would say it to begin with...
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:05 AM
Jun 2012

For another thing, this subject is not a black and white issue. Also, it's not just about abortion. It's also about the right to privacy.

I am as big of a supporter of abortion rights as anyone here, but this kind of absolutism is not realistic.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
65. Civil rights are civil rights
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:31 AM
Jun 2012

And attitudes like yours are the problem, and what keeps LGBT*.* second class citizens in society and fifth-class citizens in our party.

cynatnite

(31,011 posts)
79. You are still being disingenuous...
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:33 PM
Jun 2012

If you had stated honestly that Justice Kagan said it in regards to marriage equality, you wouldn't be getting so much grief as you are now.

You said it was about abortion. Abortion is a complicated subject and not black and white.

Your intention was to put people in a corner and when you saw them equivocate on abortion, you jumped on them saying it was in fact about marriage equality.

In other words, if we aren't in lockstep with your less than honest approach on this, you are saying we're bigots.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
82. I can see there is no discussing things logically with you.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:47 PM
Jun 2012

I want to know whether people on DU put up with what Kagan said because they don't believe in litmus tests, or because they don't care about gay rights.

I've found it's the latter.

Right to choice? Important to Democrats. Marriage equality? Not so much.

cynatnite

(31,011 posts)
84. That is not true...
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:51 PM
Jun 2012

They are different subjects. You cannot reasonably expect people to react the same when you are not being honest with them about the subject. Abortion is a complicated issue and the Dem party is filled with pro-life people who support marriage equality.

JonLP24

(29,322 posts)
68. No
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:39 AM
Jun 2012

if he/she said that during a confirmation hearing. I don't want Justices deciding cases in confirmation hearings.

 

coalition_unwilling

(14,180 posts)
69. This is sort of a trick question, I think. I voted 'no' then realized
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:42 AM
Jun 2012

I actually meant to vote 'yes.' Why 'yes'? Because there is no Federal Constitutional right to an abortion. There is a Federal Constitutional right to privacy, first articulated in Griswold v. New Hampshire (1964), which revolved around access to birth control and became part of the precedent for Roe v. Wade, IIRC.

So if a SC nominee said there were no Constitutional right to abortion, he or she would nominally be correct and so, yes, I could support him or her. Now if said nominee said there were no constitutional right to privacy, why that's a whole different ballgame.

dmallind

(10,437 posts)
70. As you doubtless know, you give too little info for a rational choice to be made
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 10:44 AM
Jun 2012

The only thing an answer here shows is that a "yes" indicates an absolute litmus test not even for being pro-choice, but for insisting that abortion in and of itself is constitutionally guaranteed. There is both a basic and an auxiliiary problem with that.

Basic: the right to an abortion is not per se guaranteed by the constitution. It is instead a right which is in reality outside it (like the right to have a tooth pulled) and in case law inherent in the right to privacy (you can have whatever bona fide medical procedure you want without the government sticking its nose in).

Auxilliary: litmus tests on single issues that are tangential to jurisprudence (as opposed to an overall approach) are a sign of shallow thinking. I would certainly expect any nominee I'd support to resist any erosion to choice, but not because they think abortion is in the constitution itself; rather I would prefer one who thought the two had almost nothing to do with each other.

dmallind

(10,437 posts)
76. Just ask a question that makes sense
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:14 PM
Jun 2012

It's not difficult. Yours is like asking "would you support a vegetarian president".

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
78. It makes sense.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:24 PM
Jun 2012

Read it carefully. As a Democrat, would you tolerate a Democratic Supreme Court nominee who said that at a hearing?

One_Life_To_Give

(6,036 posts)
73. Yes
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 11:56 AM
Jun 2012

As is pointed out up-thread. The technical language says nothing about abortion.

On edit I don't recall is using the word marriage, orientation or gender either.

sarisataka

(18,926 posts)
74. Yes
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:24 PM
Jun 2012

Last edited Mon Jun 25, 2012, 12:59 PM - Edit history (1)

because I do not believe in any one make-or-break issue.
It would raise a flag but not immediately disqualify.

 

Pab Sungenis

(9,612 posts)
81. Not at all.
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 02:45 PM
Jun 2012

Our party not only tolerated by lauded an anti-gay nominee who said that there was no Constitutional right to same-sex marriage.

I want to know if they would tolerate a nominee who said the exact same thing about abortion.

Or is it another case of "my rights are sacrosanct, yours are politically inconvenient at the moment?"

 

RZM

(8,556 posts)
85. I have no idea whether or not abortion is a constitutional right
Mon Jun 25, 2012, 03:06 PM
Jun 2012

From what I do know, legal opinions vary about that. Isn't this why the holy grail of the anti-abortion movement is a constitutional amendment banning abortion? That would put abortion in the constitution and settle the argument once and for all.

So I honestly don't know. It's possible a nominee could believe it's technically not a constitutional right, but still be 100 percent supportive of choice anyway and vote on the right side every time such a case came before the court.

Maybe I'm wrong about how the SCOTUS works. I'm certainly not an expert on the subject. But isn't possible that a justice could make an argument that abortion isn't guaranteed in the constitution but still has to be legal anyway? Are 'legal rights' exactly the same as 'constitutional rights?'

I don't know. What I do know is that I'd want a justice supportive of choice. I'll leave the interpretation of how they arrive at that position to the them and the legal scholars.

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