According to the CDC, about 619,000 abortions were performed nationwide in 2018 — or roughly 11.3 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15–44 years, and 189 abortions per 1,000 live births. Of the abortions performed, 92% were at 13 weeks’ gestation or sooner.
Joe Gale, a Republican Montgomery County commissioner who has, like Mastriano, positioned himself as a close Trump ally, said in an email that “the heartbeat legislation in Texas is a step in the right direction towards ending the atrocity of abortion.”
As governor, Gale said, he would make it his “utmost priority to protect every child from the moment of conception. Allowing the most defenseless and voiceless among us to be legally murdered in the womb is unacceptable, unethical and unforgivable. Under my leadership, Pennsylvania will be a sanctuary state for innocent unborn life.”
A Republican state senator who has expressed interest in running for governor, Lancaster County’s Scott Martin, wasn’t immediately available for comment. But his votes on previous bills give a picture of his leanings. Martin voted in favor of both the 2017 dilation and evacuation ban, as well as the 2019 bill banning abortions based on Down syndrome.
The other state senator seriously weighing a run, Erie County’s Dan Laughlin, is so far the sole member of the expected GOP field who has taken a significantly different position.
In an interview, Laughlin was unequivocal: he believes Pennsylvania’s current abortion law, which allows the procedure until 24 weeks’ gestation, is a good “middle ground” and shouldn’t be changed. If he were to become governor, he says he would veto any any bill that either expanded or contracted Pennsylvania’s current abortion laws.
“I consider myself to be fairly pro-life on a personal level,” he noted. “But this is not a space that I’m willing to step into and start telling women what they should do.”
He added that he thinks the six-week abortion ban that Texas adopted and his opponents have backed is “on the wrong side of history” and a “radical position.”
This position isn’t new. Like Martin, Laughlin has a voting record on abortion. He was one of the only Republicans in his chamber to oppose both the 2017 dilation and evacuation ban and the 2019 ban on Down syndrome-based abortions.
‘Hostility to Roe’
It’s still unclear exactly if, or how, Texas’s new law will affect other states.
The rule bans most abortions when a heartbeat is detected. That usually happens around six weeks — before many people know they are pregnant. Texas’s novel approach allows private citizens to sue anyone involved in carrying out an abortion, like a doctor, a person who funds the procedure, or someone who gave the recipient of an abortion a ride to a clinic.
The Supreme Court hasn’t explicitly ruled on it — it merely chose not to block the law from taking effect. But Bruce Ledewitz, a Duquesne University constitutional law professor who follows abortion law closely, said he can’t see any way to interpret the lack of action that doesn’t show that the court is willing to overturn Roe v. Wade or other key legal precedents.
The Roe decision, in 1973, saw the U.S. Supreme Court rule that laws are unconstitutional if they violate a woman’s right to privacy in seeking an abortion, while also saying the state has a role to protect “the potentiality of human life.” The court said that “potentiality” changes during the course of pregnancy and abortion bans are allowed when a fetus is “viable,” which is generally considered to be around 22 to 24 weeks.
Another case, 1992’s Planned Parenthood v. Casey, resulted in a similarly influential ruling that states cannot impose an “undue burden” on a person’s right to get an abortion.
The courts have consistently upheld those decisions ever since. But Ledewitz, like many legal experts, says the Texas bill is “obviously” inconsistent with Roe, at the very least.
He notes, the five-justice group that decided not to rule on the Texas law has said it plans to rule on it later, but he believes that “a law like this involving any other subject but abortion would obviously be found unconstitutional and would have been stayed.”
“One can clearly see that it is hostility to Roe that allowed the Texas law to go into effect — that probably means that there’s a five justice majority to overturn Roe, or at least to limit it so restrictively that it will, for all practical purposes, be overturned,” he said.
Republican candidates and legislative staffers haven’t been so willing to make that kind of bold prediction.
In the GOP-controlled legislature, from whence any abortion bill would have to come in order for a potential GOP governor to pass it, House and Senate leaders have been coy about whether the court’s latest move will play into their agenda.