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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(125,876 posts)
Thu Jul 3, 2025, 06:55 PM Jul 3

Supreme Court rejects Montana's bid to revive parental consent law for minors' abortions

Source: AP

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court said Thursday it will not hear a case involving a push to revive a law that minors must have their parents’ permission for an abortion in Montana, where voters have enshrined the right to abortion in the state’s constitution.

The justices rebuffed an appeal from the Republican-led state seeking to overturn a Montana Supreme Court ruling that struck down the law. The parental consent law passed in 2013 but was blocked in court and never took effect before it was invalidated last year.

Montana state leaders say that decision violated parents’ rights.

“The right that Montana seeks to vindicate here — parents’ right to know about, and participate in, their child’s medical decisions — falls well within the core of parents’ fundamental rights,” state attorneys argued in court documents.

Read more: https://apnews.com/article/supreme-court-abortion-montana-minors-parental-consent-0f7b1198b0c8af2a9a17f38bccd8217c

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Supreme Court rejects Montana's bid to revive parental consent law for minors' abortions (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Jul 3 OP
Deadline: Legal Blog-Justices Alito and Thomas want anti-abortion lawyers to bring them a parental consent appeal LetMyPeopleVote Jul 3 #1

LetMyPeopleVote

(166,210 posts)
1. Deadline: Legal Blog-Justices Alito and Thomas want anti-abortion lawyers to bring them a parental consent appeal
Thu Jul 3, 2025, 06:57 PM
Jul 3

The Supreme Court declined to take up the issue on Thursday but the two senior Republican appointees sent a message in the process.

I remember a time when Supreme Court Justices didn’t beg for specific cases to be appealed for them to rule on because they’ve already shown themselves to be conflicted.

Justices Alito and Thomas want anti-abortion lawyers to bring them a parental consent appeal www.msnbc.com/deadline-whi...

@jimrissmiller.bsky.social 2025-07-03T18:41:24.055Z

https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/alito-thomas-abortion-parental-consent-supreme-court-rcna216771

The Supreme Court on Thursday declined to review an appeal raising the issue of parental consent for abortion. But that doesn’t mean the court won’t take a different case raising that issue in the future.

Indeed, Justice Samuel Alito wrote a statement accompanying the denial, highlighting reasons why this case wasn’t an appropriate one in which to consider the issue — a statement that doubly serves as a call for anti-abortion lawyers to bring him a better case.

Joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, Alito said the appeal from Montana was a “poor vehicle” for the justices to decide whether parents have the right to know and participate in decisions regarding their kids’ medical care, including the decision to seek an abortion.

When lawyers and justices refer to a case as being a good “vehicle,” they mean the case presents a straightforward opportunity for the court to address a broader issue, without procedural complications lurking in the case that could interfere with the justices issuing a ruling that will set a national standard on an important legal question.

In his statement Thursday, Alito noted that Montana’s lawyers didn’t specifically argue during state court proceedings that infringement of parents’ federal constitutional rights was at stake. He also noted that Montana’s Supreme Court, when it ruled against the state, didn’t claim that the rights of minors took precedence over parents’ federal constitutional rights.....

While that opposition was successful, Alito stressed that the denial doesn’t mean the issue can’t come back someday. The author of the Dobbs ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade seems to hope that it will.

“It is therefore especially important that the denial of review is not read by interested parties or other courts as a rejection of the argument that the petition asks us to decide,” he wrote.

The denial came on the same day that the justices agreed to take on a new big national issue, regarding the participation of transgender girls and women in sports. That one is set to be argued in the court’s next term, which starts in October.

The court will also have at least one abortion-related appeal next term, with a First Amendment challenge from an anti-abortion group that wants to avoid turning over donor information to state authorities. The court adds cases to its docket on a rolling basis, so more abortion-related appeals could come, whether on the consent issue or otherwise.

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