According to CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, the election of a Republican president in 2008 will bring a certain end to Roe v. Wade.
Toobin has made the rounds promoting his new book, The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court. In a recent Time.com article (a straight question-and-answer account of his interview), Toobin stated the following:
Time.com: Your book strongly suggests that personalities and personal views are more important than case law.
Toobin: These Justices have tremendous discretion. The one thing that the Chief Justice said in his confirmation hearings that I completely disagree with is that Supreme Court Justices are like umpires; they just call balls and strikes. No. They make the rules. They are the commissioners of baseball. In fact, they are more like Abner Doubleday than an umpire. Deciding whether race can be used in college admissions, deciding whether states can ban abortion: those are not purely legal judgments. Those are political judgments, and the views of the Justices matter more than the Court precedents on questions like that.
Time.com: Since you bring up Roe v. Wade, what's its future?
Toobin: It depends who wins the 2008 election. If a Republican wins the 2008 election, Roe v. Wade will be overturned. There is no doubt about that. If a Democrat wins, it will likely remain in force. I don't feel that I'm going out on much of a limb there. But I think that's appropriate. The Republican party has been on record opposing Roe for two decades, and they've appointed 11 of the last 13 Justices. By rights it probably should have been gone by now.
Other comments by Toobin give insight to his political leanings. In response to a question about the famous 2000 election decision, Toobin stated: "I think Bush v. Gore was a disgrace. It was so transparently political, so poorly reasoned, so inconsistent with the prior views of the Justices."
Toobin also takes aim at "swing vote" Justice Anthony Kennedy, who disappointed liberals this past term with deciding conservative vote in a series of 5-4 decisions. A review by Salon.com described Toobin's protrayal of Kennedy as "merciless," and noted that "Toobin suggests that it was Kennedy's grandiosity and love of excitement that drove the court's disastrous involvement in Bush v. Gore..."
In a WashingtonPost.com live chat, Toobin seemed to lament Kennedy's good health and ongoing ability to render conservative decisions. "Justice Kennedy is hale and hearty and loving being at the center of the Court. I don't think he's giving retirement a thought at the moment. Why should he?"
A review in the Christian Science Monitor noted:
"There are times in 'The Nine' when Toobin reveals more about his own legal and political preferences than would be the case in a strictly objective account of the inner workings of the high court. Readers who share the author's left-of-center outlook will likely delight in Toobin's account. Others, looking for a more nuanced, politically neutral analysis may have to search elsewhere. As will many conservatives."
Getting back to Toobin's comments about Roe v. Wade, it is telling to note Toobin's certainty that the case will be overturned. In reality, there is no certainty at all that the election of a Republican president in 2008 will cause the abortion case to be reversed. First of all, there is no guarantee that the next president will make a Supreme Court appointment. While the "liberal Justices" are of advanced age, they also have life tenure, and they would presumably be reluctant to retire during a Republican presidency (they have been for the last eight years).
More importantly, there is no way to predict how a new Justice would rule on a review of Roe v. Wade. The new Justice would presumably be conservative, but the Democrats in Congress would be certain to obstruct the appointment of any Justice who would overturn Roe v. Wade. Also, liberal commentators assume that Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito are certain votes to reverse Roe v. Wade, when those conclusions are not necessarily true (either could easily defer to the existing precedent - the application of stare decisis). Toobin himself points out that 11 of the last 13 Justices have been appointed by Republicans, and yet Roe v. Wade still stands as the law of the land.
So why does Toobin speak with such certainty? One answer could be that he truly feels that way. Another reason, though, might be that this type of rhetoric will fire up the pro-choice wing of the Democratic party, mobilizing the base in advance of a presidential election. The Democratic nominee for president is certain to make this same argument during the general election. Toobin assuredly won't be the last to argue that a new Republican presidency will end legalized abortion, but he might be the only one to make the argument while commenting as an expert and author on the Supreme Court.
—Jason Aslinger is a private practice attorney in Greenville, Ohio.




















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Toobin, Time, Aborticide, Sexual Welfare, Stephie Herseth, SD
September 26, 2007 - 22:46 ET by Lame CherryWhat is being overlooked in this are some facts that just like geezers love social security hand outs, minorities love welfare hand outs, corporatations love hand outs.........Americans have been conditioned to love sexual hand outs.....because it is their way out of responsibility.
Look at "conservative" South Dakota which would not even overturn aborticide which overlooks a conditioning which people have not equated. Even young tramp girls sitting in churches want the out "for their life" of butchering a baby from fornication just like the all American boys don't want to be saddled with baby makes 3 and have now voted along with parents and grandparents who just want to be "rid of the thing".
I know Midwestern peoples and as they have now been so conditioned to butcher children there is a huge problem in this nation of even "moral" people expecting sexual welfare from the government.
It is no longer an issue of Republicans or Conservatives getting rid of that horrid Roe vs. Wade which the liberals on the Supreme Court never intended for aborticide on demand and liberal lawyers lied about to get the case into court.........it is about murdering human life as a necessity so sexual people do not have to be burdened with their actions.
That is why the fetalcide pill was initiated and murdering a few pregnant women as test cases to make a continuous slaughter of innocent Americans.
Look at what this enacted policy has gotten America. It has women now pumping out preemie kids because their scarred wombs are nto capable to go full term. It has over 6 million who should now be tax payers who are being replaced with Mexicans, Chinese and Russians whose only loyalty is to their nations. This was a coordinated on many levels direct attack upon America to fragment it so conquest would come after the fall of Rome came from within.
Toobin is a boob paid for by the people doing this and his trying to make it a political issue is nonsense as it is not an issue at all. The majority of Americans are now conditioned baby murderers by voted choice. There is nothing short of an invasion slaughtering this entire generation of adults, forcing them in fear to return to morality when all the pretty bombs do not stop invading hordes, that is ever going to overturn Roe vs. Wade and abort from America the current savages which have been created by liberals.
Oh and Stephie Herseth, Democrat of South Dakota illegally used her office, staff and direction by placing the SD law on the ballot and behind the scenes used a Congressional office for a coup against her own state. That is all highly illegal, but not one thing is being said about it.
*HIC IACET ARTORIVS REX QVONDAM REXQVE FVTVRVS
Toobin may be right, even if biased
September 27, 2007 - 00:51 ET by nyisgoldwatercountryLook at the partial-birth abortion ruling. SCOTUS isn't far away right now; though, as you say, nothing is for certain. Still, re. Toobin's bias... it's definitely there, but in the book he seems to be in love with O'Connor, which muddies the water a bit.
He's hypothecating... isn't that what pundits - good or bad, left or right - do? There's much worse out there than him. Calling him liberal makes them look better than they are. It's like when people associate us with Ann Coulter... which makes us look worse. She's our Michael Moore.
We Americans are fighting
September 27, 2007 - 00:28 ET by fitzfongWe Americans are fighting terrorists to maintain our nation's very existence, but we keep having to risk that exitence around election time because Pat Ireland and gang want to keep having their abortions. How frivolous.
Funny, it hasn't been
September 27, 2007 - 00:34 ET by wiwfFunny, it hasn't been overturned while Bush was in power
"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage
morale and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested,
exiled, or hanged." -Abraham Lincoln
It never will be. Failing
September 27, 2007 - 12:23 ET by fitzfongIt never will be. Failing to have a legitimate platform on anything else, Democrats resort to using abortion to stir up their single issue voter base. They need to generate the fear that the "evil Republicans" will take away their precious "right to choose". Outside of abortion, liberals are not interested in the people's right to choose anything.
Conservatives, if you want
September 27, 2007 - 00:48 ET by jdhawkConservatives, if you want to read a good book about the Supreme Court, try Men in Black by Mark Levin.
Tobin is a fool spouting nonsense.
Meanwhile, about 1.5 million children are slaughtered through abortion every year in America since Roe vs. Wade. was made the law of the land in 1973.
Even "Roe" aka Norma McCorvey renounced having aborted her child and is a Pro Life advocate.
Toobin shows beautifully...
September 27, 2007 - 10:17 ET by c5thenthat he has no real legal knowlegde and that the SCOTUS decisions that he reports on are all complete mysteries to him. Like the typical liberal that he is, he doesn't understand that the supreme court has rules and the Constitution to follow too.
I guess it's not completely his fault, after all many of the justices in the past have set aside the Constitution in order to put forth their ideas of what the society should do and allow. That's how we got the Roe v Wade dicision in the first place.
The day that "politician" became a career choice is the day we started losing the Republic. Let's get it back! Fred08.com
Even if Roe v. Wade is
September 28, 2007 - 22:07 ET by MikeBEven if Roe v. Wade is overturned, that does not impose a federal ban on abortions. All it would mean is the matter is remanded back to the states. State legislatures that want to ban all abortions will be allowed to, state legislatures that want to continue the status quo can do so, and those state legislatures that want something in between can so legislate. All according to the 10th amendment of the Constitution.
For a federal ban on abortions, the Constitution would have to be amended as allowed for in the Constitution. Unless, of course, the Supreme Court somehow found something in the Constitution that they can twist into an abortion ban the same way a previous Supreme Court found a "right" that Supreme Courts for the nearly 200 years previously never managed to find.
"A communist is someone who reads Marx. An anti-communist is someone who understands Marx." Ronald Reagan