By Liz Theoharis
In
the 1989
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services
case, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Missouri
law restricting the use of state funds and
facilities for abortion, an early attempt to eat
away at Roe v. Wade.
Since then, the
agenda of right-wing U.S. leaders, of which
abortion is only a part, has become clear:
slashing
school food
programs; denial of
Medicaid expansion
in states that need it most; attacks on Black,
Brown and Native people by
the
police
and border patrol; Supreme Court
decisions to
put fossil-fuel companies ahead of the rest of
society; as well as the rights of gun
manufacturers; denial of sovereignty to
indigenous people and tribes and failure to
protect voting rights and ending the
constitutional right to abortion.
The Dobbs v.
Jackson decision on abortion, overturning
Roe v. Wade, has made life in America
distinctly more dangerous. The seismic
aftershocks of that ruling are already being
felt across the country:
22 states
have laws or constitutional amendments on the
books now poised to severely limit access to
abortion or ban it outright. Even before the
Supreme Court issued its decision, states with
more restrictive
abortion laws had higher maternal-mortality and
infant-mortality rates. Now, experts are
predicting at least a 21 percent increase in pregnancy-related
deaths across
the country.
As is always the
case with public-health crises in America — the
only industrialized country without some form of
universal healthcare — it’s the poor who suffer
the most. Survey data shows that
nearly 50 percent of women who
seek abortions live under the federal poverty
line, while many more hover precariously above
it.
In states that
limit or ban abortion, poor women and others
face an immediate threat of heightened health
complications, as well as the long-term damage
associated with abortion restrictions.
Indeed, data
collected by economists in
the decades after Roe v. Wade indicates
that the greater the limits on abortion, the
more poverty for parents and the less education
for their children. Worse yet, the 13
states that had
trigger laws designed to outlaw abortion in the
event of a Roe reversal were already
among the poorest in the country. Now, poor
people in poor states will be on the punishing
spear tip of our post-Roe world.
While the Supreme
Court’s grim decision means more pain and
hardship for women, transgender and gender
non-confirming people, it signals even more: the
validation of a half-century-old
strategy by
Christian nationalists to remake the very fabric
of this nation. For the businessmen, pastors and
politicians who laid the foundations for the Dobbs ruling,
this was never just about abortion.
The multi-decade
campaign to reverse Roe v. Wade has
always been about building a political movement
to seize and wield political power. For decades,
it’s championed a vision of “family values”
grounded in the nuclear family and a version of
community life meant to tightly control sex and
sexuality, while sanctioning attacks on women
and LGBTQIA people.
Thanks to its
militant and disciplined fight to bring down Roe,
this Christian nationalist movement has
positioned itself to advance a full-spectrum
extremist agenda that is not only patriarchal
and sexist, but racist, anti-poor and
anti-democratic. Consider the Dobbs decision
the crown jewel in a power-building strategy
years in the making. Consider it as well the
coronation of a movement ready to flex its power
in ever larger, more violent, and more audacious
ways.
In that context,
bear in mind that, in his concurring opinion,
Justice Clarence Thomas suggested that
the Dobbs decision gives the Supreme
Court legal precedent to strike down other
previously settled landmark civil rights
jurisprudence, including Griswold v.
Connecticut (access to contraception), Lawrence
v. Texas (protection of same-sex
relationships), and Obergefell v. Hodges
(protection of same-sex marriage).
1868
Whether or not
these fundamental protections ultimately fall,
the Supreme Court majority’s justification for Dobbs certainly
raises the possibility that any due-process
rights not guaranteed by and included in the
Constitution before the passage of the 14th
Amendment in 1868 could be called into question.
The Christian
nationalist movement long ago identified control
of the Supreme Court as decisive for its agenda
of rolling back all the twentieth-century
progressive reforms from the New Deal of the
1930s through the Great Society of the 1960s.
Less than a week after the Dobbs decision,
in fact, that court overturned Massachusetts
v. EPA,
the 2007 ruling that set a precedent when it
came to the government’s ability to regulate
greenhouse gas emissions by polluting
industries. May Boeve, head of the environmental
group 350.org, put
it this
way:
“Overturning Roe
v. Wade means the Supreme Court isn’t
just coming for abortion — they’re coming
for the right to privacy and other legal
precedents that Roe rests on, even the
United States government’s ability to tackle
the climate crisis.”
To fully grasp the
meaning of this moment, it’s important to
recognize just how inextricably the assault on
abortion is connected to a larger urge: to
assault democracy itself, including the rights
of citizens to vote and to have decent
healthcare and housing, a public-school
education, living wages, and a clean
environment. And it’s no less important to grasp
just how a movement of Christian nationalists
used the issue of abortion to begin rolling back
the hard-won gains of the Second Reconstruction
era of the 1950s and 1960s and achieve political
power that found its clearest and most extreme
expression in the Trump years and has no
interest in turning back now.
Abortion &
the Architecture of a Movement
Throughout American
history, a current of anti-abortion sentiment,
especially on religious grounds, has been
apparent. Some traditional Roman Catholics, for
instance, long resisted the advance of abortion
rights, including a church-led dissent during
the Great Depression, when economic disaster doubled the
number of abortions (then still illegal in every
state). Some rank-and-file evangelicals were
also against it in the pre-Roe years,
their opposition baked into a theological and
moral understanding of life and death that ran
deeper than politics.
Before all this,
however, abortion was legal in the United
States. As a scholar of the subject has
explained,
in the 1800s, “Protestant clergy were notably
resistant to denouncing abortion — they feared
losing congregants if they came out against the
common practice.” In fact, the Victorian-era
campaign to make abortion illegal was driven
as much by physicians and the American Medical
Association — then intent on exerting its
professional power over midwives (mainly women
who regularly and safely carried out abortions)
— as by the Catholic Church.
Moreover, even in
the middle decades of the 20th century, anti-abortionism
was not a consensus position in evangelical
Protestantism. For example, the Southern Baptist
Convention, evangelicalism’s most significant
denomination, took moderate positions on
abortion in the 1950s and 1960s, while leading
Baptist pastors and theologians rarely preached
or wrote on the issue. In fact, a 1970
poll by
the Baptist Sunday School Board found that “70
percent of Southern Baptist pastors supported
abortion to protect the mental or physical
health of the mother, 64 percent supported
abortion in cases of fetal deformity, and 71
percent in cases of rape.”
So, what changed
for those who became the power-brokers of a more
extremist America? For one thing, the fight for
the right to abortion in the years leading up
to Roe was deeply intertwined with an
upsurge of progressive gender, racial, and class
politics.
At the time, the
Black freedom struggle was breaking the iron
grip of Jim Crow in the South, as well as
segregation and discrimination across the
country; new movements of women and LGBTQ people
were fighting for expanded legal protection,
while challenging the bounds of repressive
gender and sexual norms; the increasingly
unpopular war in Vietnam had catalyzed a robust
antiwar movement; organized labor retained a
tenuous but important seat at the economic
bargaining table; and new movements of the poor
were forcing Washington to turn once again to
the issues of poverty and economic inequality.
For a group of
reactionary clergy and well-funded right-wing
political activists, the essence of what it was
to be American seemed under attack. Well-known
figures like Phyllis Schlafly and Paul Weyrich,
who would found the Moral Majority (alongside
Jerry Falwell, Sr.), began decrying the supposed
rising threat of communism and the dissolution
of American capitalism, as well as what they saw
as the rupture of the nuclear family and of
white Christian community life through forced
desegregation. (Note that
Falwell didn’t
preach his first anti-abortion sermon until six
years after the Roe decision.)
Such leaders would
form the core of what came to be called the “New
Right.” They began working closely with
influential Christian pastors and the apostles
of neoliberal economics to build a new political
movement that could “take back the country.”
Katherine Stewart, author of The Power
Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of
Religious Nationalism, often
cites
this Weyrich quote about the movement’s goals:
“We are
radicals who want to change the existing
power structure. We are not conservatives in
the sense that conservative means accepting
the status quo. We want change — we are the
forces of change.”
Indeed, what united
these reactionaries above all else was their
opposition to desegregation. Later, they would
conveniently change their origin story from
overt racism to a more palatable anti-abortion,
anti-choice struggle. As historian Randall
Balmer put
it:
“Opposition to
abortion, therefore, was a godsend for
leaders of the Religious Right because it
allowed them to distract attention from the
real genesis of their movement: defense of
racial segregation in evangelical
institutions.”
Many of the
movement’s leaders first
converged around
their fear that segregated Christian schools
would be stripped of public vouchers. As Balmer
points out, however, they soon recognized that
championing racial segregation was not a winning
strategy when it came to building a movement
with a mass base.
So, they looked
elsewhere. What they discovered was that, in the
wake of the Roe decision, a dislike of
legalized abortion had unsettled some Protestant
and Catholic evangelicals. In other words, these
operatives didn’t actually manufacture a growing
evangelical hostility to abortion, but harnessed
and encouraged it as a political vehicle for
radical change.
Looking back in the
wake of the recent Dobbs decision
obliterating Roe v. Wade, Katherine
Stewart put
it this way:
“Abortion
turned out to be the critical unifying issue
for two fundamentally political reasons.
First, it brought together conservative
Catholics who supplied much of the
intellectual leadership of the movement with
conservative Protestants and evangelicals.
Second, by tying abortion to the perceived
social ills of the age — the sexual
revolution, the civil rights movement, and
women’s liberation — the issue became a
focal point for the anxieties about social
change welling up from the base.”
What this movement
and its allies also discovered was that they
could build and exert tremendous power through a
long-term political strategy that initially
focused on Southern elections and then their
ability to take over the courts, including most
recently the Supreme Court. Abortion became just
one potent weapon in an arsenal whose impact
we’re feeling in a devastating fashion today.
A Fusion
Movement from Below?
As Reverend
William Barber,
co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, has
pointed out, check out a map of the states in
the U.S. that have banned abortion and you’ll
find that you’re dealing with the same
legislators and courts denying voting rights,
refusing to raise municipal minimum wages, and
failing to protect immigrants, LGBTQIA people,
and the planet itself.
As the Economic
Policy Institute described
the situation after
Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito’s leaked
draft opinion on abortion hit the news in May:
“It is no
coincidence that the states that will ban
abortion first are also largely the states
with the lowest minimum wages, states less
likely to have expanded Medicaid, states
more likely to be anti-union ‘Right-to-Work’
states, and states with higher-than-average
incarceration rates. … Environments in which
abortion is legal and accessible have
lower rates
of teen first births and marriages. Abortion
legalization has also been associated with reduced maternal
mortality for Black women. The ability to
delay having a child has been found to
translate to significantly increased wages
and labor earnings, especially among Black
women, as well as increased likelihood of
educational attainment.”
Indeed, the right
to abortion should be considered a bellwether
issue when judging the health of American
democracy, one that guarantees equal protection
under the law for everyone.
The most recent
Supreme Court rulings, including Dobbs,
are being met with growing resistance and
organizing. Weeks ago,
thousands
of protestors came together on Pennsylvania
Avenue for a Mass Poor People and Low Wage
Worker’s Assembly and Moral March on Washington
and to the Polls. On the very day of the
Dobbs decision and ever since, protests
against that ruling, including acts of
nonviolent civil disobedience, have been
growing.
In a similar
fashion, there is mobilization against
gun violence and
the climate
crisis.
There is an apparent rise of a
new labor
movement with workers organizing at Starbucks,
Dollar General stores and Walmart, among other
workplaces.
The Christian
nationalist movement relies on a
divide-and-conquer strategy and single-issue
organizing.
As a Christian
theologian and pastor myself, I’ve been deeply
disturbed by the growth of the Christian
nationalist movement. It is valuable to heed its
focus and its fury. Their leaders were clear
about the necessity, if they were to gain power
in the U.S., to build a national political
movement.
In response, the
140 million poor and low-wealth Americans,
pro-choice and pro-earth activists, and those
concerned about the future of democracy can also
build a moral movement from below to confront
it.
Liz Theoharis,
a TomDispatch regular,
is a theologian, ordained minister, and
anti-poverty activist. Co-chair of the Poor
People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral
Revival and
director of the Kairos
Center for Religions, Rights and Social Justice at
Union Theological Seminary in New York City, she
is the author of Always
With Us? What Jesus Really Said About the Poorand We
Cry Justice: Reading the Bible with the Poor
People’s Campaign.
Follow her on Twitter at @liztheo.
This article is
from
TomDispatch.com.
The views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
Reader financed- No
Advertising - No Government Grants -
No Algorithm - This
Is Independent