Florida
Related: About this forumThe State Constitution of Florida--Yes, Florida--Protects the Right to Abortion
One of my friends who is very passionate about the abortion issue sent me this today after listening to me rant about "originalism" so I thought I'd share. I was making the point that you can't get more "originalist" than the direct will of the voters in regard to this 2012 ballot initiative... and this article in Slate makes the originalist point that I was making, which I thought was interesting.
Slate
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Ultimately, the electorate rejected Amendment 6, with 55 percent of the voters voting against it. This rejection is critical to understanding the post-Dobbs landscape in Florida.
When voters rejected Amendment 6 in 2012, the people of Florida adopted or incorporated the Florida Supreme Courts prior judicial constructions of the privacy right under the established rule of construction. Put another way: the 1989 and 2003 decisions upholding the right to abortion as embedded in the right to privacy are reaffirmed. Voters could not have been clearer: Our state constitutions explicit, freestanding, and broadly worded privacy right protects the right to an abortion. And the protection of the right is in no way affected by the federal constitution or how it is interpreted.
The issue, then, is not whether the Florida Supreme Court can recede from its prior abortion precedents under the now-weakened doctrine of stare decisis. By rejecting Amendment 6 in 2012, Floridians codified that precedent into the constitutions privacy right. To return to Dobbs, the people decided that the right [to abortion] is somehow implicit in the constitutional text. Should the Florida Supreme Court purport to overrule its precedent to hold that the privacy right doesnt include the right to an abortion, it would be doing nothing less than nullifying the will of the people of the state of Florida.
Diamond_Dog
(34,546 posts)Benito de Santis is working on an edict to change this as we speak
CentralMass
(15,507 posts)In It to Win It
(9,489 posts)J_William_Ryan
(2,091 posts)Which of course the Florida supreme court will do its among the most partisan and corrupt in the country, all of its members appointed by Republicans, three by DeSantis.
In It to Win It
(9,489 posts)Yeah, that's why they want to fast track it to the state supreme court.
They are in full belief that the Court will back them this time... and they're probably right.
Thomas Hurt
(13,925 posts)constitution says. The Imams on the SC will back that play to the hilt as well.