Two years have passed since the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade of 1973 which provided constitutional protection for the right to abortion, returning to American states full power to legislate on this subject.
Several of them have also seized this opportunity finally offered, increasing the number of restrictive laws and piling up obstacles for American women seeking to terminate their pregnancies.
But an analysis of the concrete effect of the efforts of the two camps – anti and pro-abortion – paints a surprising landscape, and at the opposite poles: if access to clinics has decreased in a “significant” way, the abortion pill, which can now be prescribed by telemedicine, has made abortions more accessible than ever for certain women – and even more numerous, report observers of the American political scene consulted by The duty.
Access evaporates
On June 24, 2022, anti-abortion activists rejoiced loudly in front of the Supreme Court building in Washington DC “We are the first post-Wade generation,” young people joyfully chanted.
And over the past two years, 14 states have completely banned abortion, with very narrow exceptions – some do not even allow it for incest or rape. The law that allows the termination of a pregnancy when the mother’s life is in danger is so restricted that women have suffered serious complications and in some cases even died, points out law professor Carrie Baker of Smith College, at Massachusetts, specializing in feminist studies and reproductive rights.
Seven other states have significantly reduced the period within which abortion is permitted (prohibited after 6 or 12 weeks of pregnancy). Such limits, in effect in 21 states, would have been illegal when Roe v. Wade was in force.
“It has become significantly more restrictive,” for access to abortion, but also for urgent pregnancy care, says Mary Ziegler, professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of California at Davis, specializing in reproductive rights and American conservatism.
Because after June 2022, abortion clinics in the United States have dropped like flies.
But the number of abortions increased in 2023 in the country to reach its highest level in more than 10 years. In short, they have been on the rise since the invalidation of Roe v. Wade, surpassing a million last year, reports the Guttmacher Research Institute, dedicated to advancing reproductive health and positioned in favor of access to abortion.
Because women who wanted an abortion continued to travel – like never before – to obtain the procedure in a state where it is permitted: they were one in 10 to have done so in 2020 but now, they are one in five.
To block this flow of patients, states are criminalizing the doctors who provide them, the women who cross borders to obtain an abortion and even authorizing citizens to sue those who “help” them for damages – observers have denounced that this could even making an Uber driver liable for taking a woman to a clinic liable to prosecution. Moreover, last year, a Texan, Marcus Silva, sued three friends of his ex-wife for a million dollars each, accusing them of having helped her obtain the abortion pill.
Even if the validity of some of these new legislative measures is questionable, “these are tactics intended to scare” and therefore to discourage anyone from helping a woman, judge Kelly Gordon, assistant professor of political science at the University McGill, who has a keen interest in conservative political movements and reproductive justice.
The abortion pill
The other reason for this increase in the number of abortions is the abortion pill, which since 2021 can be prescribed by telemedicine by a doctor from a state where it is legal, and sent by mail to the patient.
It is now used in nearly two-thirds of abortions in the United States, rising to 63% in 2023, a notable increase from 53% in 2020.
“In a way, it increases access,” says Professor Baker.
This enraged the opponents of abortion who made this pill their new target.
To put a stop to its growing popularity, some states have chosen to make its prescription by telemedicine illegal and others have tried to ban its sending by mail – without success, after the intervention of the Department of Justice which had to clarify the situation.
The counterattack
To protect their medical personnel, states like Illinois have responded by adopting shield laws (Shield Lawsin English) to protect them from criminal prosecution by those where abortion is illegal.
Faced with this sea of restrictions created since June 2022, seven states, such as Minnesota and Oregon, rushed to extend the protection granted to the right to abortion. Others have also adopted legislative measures to protect access to contraception, also in the sights of the most conservative.
Three states (California, Connecticut and Washington) have even implemented measures banning geolocation near abortion clinics because activists can use the technology to target patients.
Abortion in court
The battle also took place on another front: that of the courts.
There are “tons of legal cases” in lower courts at the state level challenging laws restricting or providing more access to abortion. It becomes very difficult to know what is legal or not, which “creates anxiety and fear, among patients and doctors alike,” believes Ms.me Baker who adds: “It’s part of the strategy. »
A group of doctors also decided to attack the root of this “evil” by challenging in court – and all the way to the Supreme Court – the authorization given to the abortion pill (mifepristone) by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration). The judgment rendered last week refused to revoke it, but “on a technical point, and not on the merits of the case”, specifies Professor Baker.
A cold shower for anti-abortion activists, who have no intention of giving up: “They will try again,” she says to herself, convinced.