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Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (Roe v Wade overruled)

SCOTUS · Active Active SCOTUS
Court
Supreme Court
Judge (CL)
Carlton W. Reeves
Filed (CL)
Mar 19, 2018
CL Status
Terminated

Legal Issues

Tenth AmendmentFederalismConstitutional RightsPrivacyAbortionStates' Rights

The Facts

Mississippi enacted a law banning most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, directly challenging the viability standard established by Roe and Casey. Jackson Women's Health Organization, Mississippi's only abortion clinic, challenged the law. The Court accepted certiorari and ultimately overruled Roe outright.

The Issue

Whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional

Whether Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey should be overruled

The Rules

Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process

Stare decisis — when to overrule precedent

Deeply rooted in history and tradition standard for unenumerated rights

The Application

History

Applying the historical-and-traditions test, the Court found that Mississippi's 15-week abortion ban involved a right—abortion—that was neither recognized at the Founding nor protected throughout American history, thus failing to qualify as fundamental under the Due Process Clause. With abortion reduced to rational-basis review rather than a fundamental right subject to strict scrutiny, Mississippi's asserted interest in protecting potential life clearly satisfied constitutional scrutiny. The ruling returned abortion regulation entirely to the states, permitting even complete bans that would have been unconstitutional under Roe's viability framework.

The Conclusion

Court held 6-3 that the Constitution does not protect abortion rights. Roe and Casey overruled. Justice Alito wrote for the majority; Justices Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan dissented.

SCOTUS TMR-cfae3973 May 13, 2026
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