NARAL PRO-CHOICE ARIZONA: JUDGE JOHN ROBERTS IS A DIVISIVE PICK FOR SUPREME COURT
Washington, DC – NARAL Pro-Choice Arizona, the state’s leading advocate for personal privacy and a woman’s right to choose, raised concerns about the nomination of Judge John Roberts to the Supreme Court and called on Senators McCain and Kyl ensure that John Roberts provides the American people with forthright answers on his judicial philosophy, including whether he will preserve personal privacy and the constitutionally protected right to choose.
“Arizonans believe in our culture of freedom and personal responsibility, and the nomination of Judge John Roberts is a direct affront to such mainstream values,” said NARAL Pro-Choice Arizona Field Organizer Heather Terrell. “We expect our senators not to act merely as a rubber stamp to President Bush’s nominees. Senators have a duty to the American public to ask the tough questions and ensure that Judge Roberts respect understand the impact his decisions will have on the everyday lives of Arizonans.”
A cursory look at Judge John Roberts’s background reveals a demonstrated record of opposition to reproductive rights and personal freedom:
· As Deputy Solicitor General, Roberts argued in a brief before the U.S. Supreme Court (in a case that did not implicate Roe v. Wade) that “[w]e continue to believe that Roe was wrongly decided and should be overruled…. [T]he Court’s conclusion in Roe that there is a fundamental right to an abortion… finds no support in the text, structure, or history of the Constitution.”
· In Rust v. Sullivan , the Supreme Court considered whether Department of Health and Human Services regulations limiting the ability of Title X recipients to engage in abortion-related activities violated various constitutional provisions. Roberts, appearing on behalf of HHS as Deputy Solicitor General, argued that this domestic gag rule did not violate constitutional protections.
· Roberts, again as Deputy Solicitor General, filed an amicus brief for the United States supporting Operation Rescue and six individuals who routinely blocked access to reproductive health care clinics, arguing that the protesters’ behavior did not amount to discrimination against women even though only women could exercise the right to seek an abortion. Roberts argued that the protesters’ blockade and protests merely amounted to an expression of their opposition to abortion and that a civil rights remedy was therefore inappropriate. The case – Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic – presented the Supreme Court with the question of whether the Civil Rights Act of 1871 provided a federal cause of action against persons obstructing access to abortion clinics.
· The Court was so accustomed to the Solicitor General and the Deputy Solicitor General arguing for the overturn of Roe that during John Roberts’s oral argument before the Supreme Court in Bray, a Justice Asked, “Mr. Roberts, in this case are you asking that Roe v. Wade be overruled?” He responded, “No, your honor, the issue doesn’t even come up.” To this the justice said, “Well, that hasn’t prevented the Solicitor General from taking that position in prior cases.”