Current:Home > StocksWisconsin’s high court to hear oral arguments on whether an 1849 abortion ban remains valid -文件: temp/data/webname/news/nam2.txt
Wisconsin’s high court to hear oral arguments on whether an 1849 abortion ban remains valid
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:36:29
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — The Wisconsin Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday on whether a law that legislators adopted more than a decade before the Civil War bans abortion and can still be enforced.
Abortion-rights advocates stand an excellent chance of prevailing, given that liberal justices control the court and one of them remarked on the campaign trail that she supports abortion rights. Monday’s arguments are little more than a formality ahead of a ruling, which is expected to take weeks.
Wisconsin lawmakers passed the state’s first prohibition on abortion in 1849. That law stated that anyone who killed a fetus unless the act was to save the mother’s life was guilty of manslaughter. Legislators passed statutes about a decade later that prohibited a woman from attempting to obtain her own miscarriage. In the 1950s, lawmakers revised the law’s language to make killing an unborn child or killing the mother with the intent of destroying her unborn child a felony. The revisions allowed a doctor in consultation with two other physicians to perform an abortion to save the mother’s life.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling legalizing abortion nationwide nullified the Wisconsin ban, but legislators never repealed it. When the Supreme Court overturned Roe two years ago, conservatives argued that the Wisconsin ban was enforceable again.
Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul filed a lawsuit challenging the law in 2022. He argued that a 1985 Wisconsin law that allows abortions before a fetus can survive outside the womb supersedes the ban. Some babies can survive with medical help after 21 weeks of gestation.
Sheboygan County District Attorney Joel Urmanski, a Republican, argues the 1849 ban should be enforceable. He contends that it was never repealed and that it can co-exist with the 1985 law because that law didn’t legalize abortion at any point. Other modern-day abortion restrictions also don’t legalize the practice, he argues.
Dane County Circuit Judge Diane Schlipper ruled last year that the old ban outlaws feticide — which she defined as the killing of a fetus without the mother’s consent — but not consensual abortions. The ruling emboldened Planned Parenthood to resume offering abortions in Wisconsin after halting procedures after Roe was overturned.
Urmanski asked the state Supreme Court in February to overturn Schlipper’s ruling without waiting for lower appellate courts to rule first. The court agreed to take the case in July.
Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin filed a separate lawsuit in February asking the state Supreme Court to rule directly on whether a constitutional right to abortion exists in the state. The court agreed in July to take that case as well. The justices have yet to schedule oral arguments.
Persuading the court’s liberal majority to uphold the ban appears next to impossible. Liberal Justice Janet Protasiewicz stated openly during her campaign that she supports abortion rights, a major departure for a judicial candidate. Usually, such candidates refrain from speaking about their personal views to avoid the appearance of bias.
The court’s three conservative justices have accused the liberals of playing politics with abortion.
veryGood! (999)
Related
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Dexter Quisenberry: The Leap in Integrating Quantitative Trading with Artificial Intelligence
- Sister Wives’ Janelle Brown Marks Rare Celebration After Kody Brown Split
- Roland Quisenberry: A Token-Driven Era for Fintech
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Police fatally shoot armed man who barricaded himself in New Hampshire bed-and-breakfast
- Don’t wait for a holiday surge. Now is a good time to get your flu and COVID-19 vaccines
- She was found dead by hikers in 1994. Her suspected killer was identified 30 years later.
- Family of explorer who died in the Titan sub implosion seeks $50M-plus in wrongful death lawsuit
- Southern California wildfire moving 'dangerously fast' as flames destroy homes
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- A murder trial is closing in the killings of two teenage girls in Delphi, Indiana
- Man who used legal loophole to live rent-free for years in NYC hotel found unfit to stand trial
- Cole Leinart, son of former USC and NFL QB Matt Leinart, commits to SMU football
- Connie Chiume, Black Panther Actress, Dead at 72: Lupita Nyong'o and More Pay Tribute
- 2 people charged with stealing items from historic site inside Canyonlands National Park
- Pascal left Joan's 'Golden Bachelorette' because he was 'the chosen one': 'Men Tell All'
- Horoscopes Today, November 6, 2024
Recommendation
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
49ers DE Nick Bosa says MAGA hat stunt was 'well worth' likely fine
Inside BYU football's Big 12 rise, from hotel pitches to campfire tales to CFP contention
Bribery charges brought against Mississippi mayor, prosecutor and council member
Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
SWA Token Fuels an Educational Ecosystem, Pioneering a New Era of Smart Education
NY state police launch criminal probe into trooper suspended over account of being shot and wounded
The 'Survivor' 47 auction returns, but a player goes home. Who was voted out this week?