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Supreme Court abortion case, Idaho v. US, is about gaining federal control over state rights
Live Action News ^ | June 25, 2024 | Rev. James R. Harden, M.Div.

Posted on 06/25/2024 7:14:59 AM PDT by Morgana

The Supreme Court case Idaho v. United States is less about abortion and more about federal control over state and individual rights. Thwarted by the U.S. Supreme Court [SCOTUS] in its effort to make abortion as easy to get as possible, the left is now hoping it can get the court to restore some of the power Democrats lost in the Idaho v. United States case. The case considers whether federal law can supersede state law. In this case, whether the federal government can require states that participate in Medicare to perform abortions in violation of a state law.

“The court’s ruling could affect health care in emergency rooms in the 22 states that have imposed restrictions on abortions, particularly in the six states that – like Idaho – lack exemptions to the general ban to protect the health of the mother,” according to the SCOTUS Blog.

The court ruled two years ago in Dobbs v Jackson that abortion regulation is the purview of the states. However, the Biden administration is now attempting to rob states of that legislative right similar to what Roe v. Wade did in 1973, but this time using the power of the purse string.

During oral arguments at the Supreme Court, certain conservative justices expressed concern that the implications of a decision favoring the federal government on abortion will impact issues beyond the abortion issue to include things like transgender treatments. This could send the U.S. down a legal slippery slope where issues that should fall under state control per the 10th Amendment will be absconded by the federal government through its control over billions of dollars in various program funding. So many organizations and programs are dependent on federal funds such that losing those funds would jeopardize access to those services, forcing states to carry the political water of those in control of the federal government, further distancing the voice of the people from meaningful home rule or state representation.

Sadly, it is not something new for the federal government to use the power of the purse to control actions. Entitlement programs do little to help people and instead exacerbate the cycle of government dependence, the fear of the loss of those benefits drives those in receipt to vote. Student loans not only inflate the cost of education but make millions of college students financially obligated to the government so that the party that promises to reduce that debt can use that as a lever to pull more votes.

Financial codependence notwithstanding, these programs were not designed to subvert state laws.

But the federal government is using the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, which ensures that all patients have access to emergency services without regard to their ability to pay for those services, as its weapon to hold those states hostage to a radical abortion agenda.

The law “provides that when someone with an ‘emergency medical condition’ comes to a hospital that participates in federal Medicare reimbursement, the hospital must offer the treatment necessary to stabilize that condition,” according to the SCOTUS Blog.

The Biden Administration is arguing that abortion is a treatment necessary to stabilize an emergency medical condition. It is worth noting that Idaho’s law does not ban abortion in the extremely rare case that continued pregnancy would cause imminent death to the mother. Absurdly, lower courts agreed with the premise that general abortion access needed to be permitted wherever federal funding is received, even when contrary to the laws of that state.

A ruling is expected any day. And should the Supreme Court side with the U.S. in this case, it could generate an untold number of challenges based on exceptions to the law rather than the vast number of women and babies abortion regulations protect. While exceptions can be made to law on a case-by-case basis, rule by exception unnecessarily complicates and weakens the rule of law.

If enough people in Idaho believe that the abortion laws in their state are too strict or burdensome, then they need to vote for representation to change the law. That is what the Dobbs decision was all about. Instead, the Biden administration, knowing they don’t have the political will to change the laws, is acting like a spoiled child demanding the judiciary do it for them. That’s how pro-abortion politicians did it in 1973. And they are hoping to do it again. Let’s hope SCOTUS doesn’t fall for the trick again and instead reinforces states’ rights and the legislative process.

Bio: Rev. James R. Harden, M.Div. is the CEO of CompassCare Pregnancy Services and lives outside of Rochester, NY with his wife and ten children. Jim pioneered the first measurable and repeatable medical model in the pregnancy center movement, helping hundreds of centers nationwide become more effective at reaching more women and saving more babies from abortion. He has written extensively on medical ethics, executive leadership, and pro-life strategy.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: Idaho
KEYWORDS: abortion; idaho; prolife; scotus; statesrights

1 posted on 06/25/2024 7:14:59 AM PDT by Morgana
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To: Morgana

CJ Roberts seems to have this overwhelming urge to ‘split the baby’ (probably a horrible metaphor, given the subject) with controversial SCOTUS cases. Given that, I have a guess on how this one will go:

(1) Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act: vaguely worded.
(2) Idaho abortion legislation: very specifically worded.
(3) Ergo, the majority says that this Federal law will not override the state provision since the Federal law did not specifically address the provisions that the state has clarified.
(4) Accordingly, the Feds may not deny funds since the state is not violating either provision - by the letter of each law.

That leaves for another day the question on Federal vs. state laws, the 10th amendment, and whether the purse-power is even legal.

If that is done, Roberts might be able to carve out a 6-3 decision.

Here’s hoping I’m right on all that.


2 posted on 06/25/2024 7:38:56 AM PDT by alancarp (George Orwell was an optimist.)
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To: Morgana

States don’t have rights. Rights and associated responsibilities are human bestowed by God.


3 posted on 06/25/2024 7:51:03 AM PDT by kvanbrunt2
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To: Morgana

Really should be a no-brainer decision for an unbiased SCOTUS.

The state should provide emergency services, including abortion, to save the life of the mother for medical emergencies. After that, if the life is ‘stable’ the person needs to seek transfer to an out of state facility for their ‘elective’ abortion. They shouldn’t be forced to provide ‘on demand’ abortion services to participate in Medicare. That’s Federal overreach, the entire point of the Dobbs decision.


4 posted on 06/25/2024 8:53:31 AM PDT by Pete Dovgan (Repeatedl)
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To: kvanbrunt2

The 10th amendment has entered the chat.


5 posted on 06/25/2024 9:09:37 AM PDT by Recovering_Democrat
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To: Morgana; All
Thank you for referencing that article Morgana.

"Supreme Court abortion case, Idaho v. US, is about gaining federal control over state rights"


Given our unconstitutionally big federal government, and the likewise corrupt mainstream media that supports it, does it surprise anybody that the Constitution's Sovereignty Clause is effectively being shoved in our faces in federal pro-abortion propaganda, most voters probably clueless about 10th Amendment-protected state sovereignty?

Noting that abortion being pushed by corrupt, power-grabbing federal politicians to "justify" murdering unborn children is actually a state power issue, it remains that the states have never expressly constitutionally giving the feds the specific power to dictate, regulate, tax and spend for state power abortion.

Instead, corrupt federal lawmakers encourage voter abuse of repealable 17th Amendment powers (popular voting for federal senators) to try to stay in power by fighting for politically correct abortion rights, federal Democratic and RINO lawmakers additionally abusing their repealable 16th Amendment powers (direct taxes) to unconstitutionally help pay for abortions for pro-abortion voters, otherwise known in political circles as kickback.

(Again) "From the accepted doctrine that the United States is a government of delegated powers, it follows that those not expressly granted, or reasonably to be implied from such as are conferred, are reserved to the states, or to the people. To forestall any suggestion to the contrary, the Tenth Amendment was adopted. The same proposition, otherwise stated, is that powers not granted are prohibited [emphasis added]." —United States v. Butler, 1936.

Constitution-respecting Trump supporters need to effectively "impeach and remove" worthless, OBiden-supporting state and federal career lawmakers and executives in November. Democratic and Republican patriots need to support hopeful Trump 47 with a new, Constitution-respecting Congress, not only so that he will not be a lame duck president from the first day of his second term, but will support him to quickly finish draining the swamp, including putting a stop to ALL unconstitutional federal taxing and spending, including for abortion.

6 posted on 06/25/2024 9:51:11 AM PDT by Amendment10
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