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July 10, 2022

Roe v. Wade, the infamous 1973 Supreme Court decision, in which seven men in black robes invented a constitutional right for a woman to kill her child in utero, has thankfully been repealed.

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On Friday, amidst another tragic series of dementia-signifying public gaffes, Joe Biden referred to the repeal of that decision as “an exercise in raw political power.” 

Not only is that untrue, it is precisely the opposite of the truth. 

Do you want an example of a Supreme Court that exercised “raw political power?”  That would be the power-mad Burger Court in 1973, which decided Roe v. Wade, and usurped political power in two distinct ways. 

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First, it falsely presumed that the federal government has the right to issue binding guidance on an issue that the Constitution does not even approach, much less explicitly address as an enumerated power.  Ostensibly, this newly imagined power could have opened the door for the federal government, via the legislative branch, to usurp the power of the states and their citizens to govern on the deeply divisive issue of abortion.

That would be bad enough, as Thomas Jefferson warns us.  When it comes to the Constitution, the Tenth Amendment is everything, he observed in 1791:

I consider the foundation of the Constitution as laid on this ground: That “all powers not delegated to the United States, by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States or the People.”  To take a single step beyond the boundaries thus specifically drawn around the powers of Congress, is to take possession of a field of boundless power, no longer susceptible of any definition.

Would it be possible to violate the Founders’s vision of limited government more egregiously than this?

“Hold my beer,” says the Court in 1973.

Not only did that Court invent, out of thin air, the notion that a woman has a federally protected right to kill her unborn child, but it usurped the power of the federal legislature to create arbitrary guidelines to which the states must adhere, legally allowing or proscribing abortion — not through laws presented and enacted by elected representatives, but as the unelected arbiters of the Supreme Court saw fit. 

That is nothing less than an “exercise in raw political power.”