State lawmakers in [tag]Louisiana[/tag] passed a pretty sweeping [tag]ban[/tag] on [tag]abortion[/tag] this week, dependent on the [tag]Supreme Court[/tag] overturning [tag]Roe v. Wade[/tag]. A leading sponsor of the bill, state Senator Ben Nevers (D), said, “I had a strong belief that we could finally protect the innocent life of an unborn child. This is about the U.S. [tag]Constitution[/tag] granting every person the [tag]right to life[/tag].”
The remark prompted Jacob Sullum to suggest that the implication of the remark “is that the Constitution not only permits but requires a federal ban on abortion.” Matthew Yglesias responded by arguing that under the circumstances, “if a fetus is legally a person, then I think permitting abortion is pretty clearly unconstitutional.”
At the risk of sounding like a picky strict constructionist, there’s one minor point that Nevers, Sullum, and Yglesias neglected to mention: the Constitution doesn’t say a word about anyone having a “right to life.” That whole “life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness” line is in the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution. If a fetus is deemed a person under the law, abortion may fall under murder statutes, but unconstitutional? I don’t think so.
If abortion-rights opponents want “right to life” language in the text, they’re going to have to push for an amendment. I suspect if they tried, they’d have even less success than they did today.