This Is the Real Impact of the Supreme Court's Planned Parenthood Decision.
Last edited Thu Jul 3, 2025, 01:15 PM - Edit history (1)
by Linda Greenhouse
'The Supreme Courts generosity toward President Trumps flagrant violations of constitutional norms has cast a shadow long enough to obscure nearly everything else about the courts term that ended last week. While thats understandable, there is one decision, issued during the crush of the final days, that shouldnt be overlooked. Not only will its immediate impact be significant, but it also reveals something about the current majoritys pursuit of a long-term goal: ridding American law of the notion that if a right is violated, there must be a remedy.
. . .The decision is likely to require Planned Parenthood to reduce services or even close clinics in South Carolina and in any other states that might choose to follow South Carolinas lead.
But this case was not really about abortion, which South Carolinas Medicaid plan doesnt cover. Rather, the state sought to punish Planned Parenthood by withholding its eligibility for Medicaid reimbursement for the full range of other reproductive health services that its clinics provide, depriving the organization of a vital source of revenue. . .
The path to lawsuits of this kind is through one of the countrys oldest and most important civil rights laws, the Civil Rights Act of 1871, referred to in its modern codification as Section 1983. The law authorizes individuals to sue state officials for violations of constitutional rights and, as broadly interpreted by the Supreme Court in a 1980 case, for violations of statutory rights as well.
. . . For example, in a 1990 decision, Wilder v. Virginia Hospital Association, the court ruled that hospitals could use Section 1983 to sue the state for the reasonable and adequate reimbursement that the Medicaid law requires. Those whom a law intended to benefit were entitled to sue for the benefit, the court held. . .
. . . At the end of the term, instead of deciding an important voting rights case from Louisiana that it heard in March, the court issued a surprising and opaque order setting the case for reargument at some unspecified time, with unspecified new questions to possibly be added to the case. Given that the case was fully briefed and argued, what questions might those be? . . .
. . .Justices Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas went out of their way to raise the question in a voting rights case from Arizona four years ago, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled in 2023 that the statute does not directly provide for private lawsuits. In a follow-on ruling seven weeks ago, that court held that neither could Section 1983 be the vehicle for a Voting Rights Act lawsuit.
Given the Trump administrations dismemberment of civil rights enforcement and its disinclination to recognize discrimination against anyone other than white people, the convergence is nearly perfect. No one could be blamed for actually killing the Voting Rights Act. A central achievement of the civil rights era would simply be a memory, a law with rights but without remedies, a project accomplished.'
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/02/opinion/planned-parenthood-supreme-court-decision.html

willamabroy2
(3 posts)Big implications definitely worth following closely.
Serious impact on healthcare access nationwide
marble falls
(67,028 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(166,448 posts)lees1975
(6,693 posts)It sure would have been nice if Democrats, when we had the power to do it back in 2020, had listened to some of those on the more progressive side of the party, and voted to amend the judiciary act to create five new Supreme Court seats in order to pack the court, neutralize the criminal extremist element, and avoid all this grief now. It would have required the risky, but bold move of getting rid of the filibuster, but it would have ultimately resulted in the overturning of citizens united, and the reinstating of Roe, which would have changed all of these draconian rulings. It would also have expidited Trump's trials for all of those indictments surrounding the insurrection and stealing classified documents.
But that's the kind of visionary thinking that comes from politicians whose boldness leads them to take risks for their constituents, rather than preserving the status quo. I don't think we have that in this country any more.