Bush Nominates Alito
President Bush nominated Samuel Alito, a judge with solid credentials and a long history of conservative decisions for the Supreme Court.
The “A” issue was immediately raised.
What I find interesting is how two different news organzations differed in their reports about Alito’s best-known abortion decision.
The AP article had one sentence at the very end of their article:
In the early 1990s, Alito was the lone dissenter in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, a case in which the 3rd Circuit struck down a Pennsylvania law that included a provision requiring women seeking abortions to notify their spouses.
NPR devoted a lot more words to this decision and placed it in the middle of their article:
| Go to Home - Most Recent PostsAlito’s most well-known opinion is his dissent in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey in October 1991. Alito and his colleagues on the 3rd Circuit sided with the state, agreeing that teenagers must have parental consent before obtaining an abortion. They also upheld legislation stating that women must wait 24 hours after receiving information on alternatives to abortion before undergoing the procedure. But in an opinion that dissented in part, Alito went a step further and said it was within the law to require women to notify their spouses before they get an abortion.
When the U.S. Supreme Court took up an appeal of the ruling in 1992, much of the 3rd Circuit’s ruling was upheld. The court agreed some limits such as parental notification were valid. But it agreed with the majority of the lower court that requiring women to notify their husbands was unconstitutional. The high court disagreed with Alito’s lone dissent, saying requiring spousal notification would present an “undue burden” to women seeking an abortion.