I Served on the Florida Supreme Court. What the New Majority Just Did Is Indefensible.
I Served on the Florida Supreme Court. What the New Majority Just Did Is Indefensible.
On April 1, the Florida Supreme Court, in a 61 ruling, overturned decades of decisions beginning in 1989 that recognized a womans right to choosethat is, whether to have an abortionup to the time of viability.
Anchored in Floridas own constitutional right to privacy, this critical individual right to abortion had been repeatedly affirmed by the state Supreme Court, which consistently struck down conflicting laws passed by the Legislature.
As explained first in 1989:
Floridas privacy provision is clearly implicated in a womans decision of whether or not to continue her pregnancy. We can conceive of few more personal or private decisions concerning ones body in the course of a lifetime.
Tellingly, the justices at the time acknowledged that their decision was based not only on U.S. Supreme Court precedent but also on Floridas own privacy amendment.
I served on the Supreme Court of Florida beginning in 1998 and retired, based on our mandatory retirement requirement, a little more than two decades later. Whether Floridas Constitution provided a right to privacy that encompassed abortion was never questioned, even by those who would have been deemed the most conservative justicesalmost all white men back in 1989!
And strikingly, one of the conservative justices at that time stated: If the United States Supreme Court were to subsequently recede from Roe v. Wade, this would not diminish the abortion rights now provided by the privacy amendment of the Florida Constitution. Wow!