TAP alumna Kay Steiger has an excellent article about how vulnerable Roe is under the current Supreme Court, which quotes yours truly. The bottom line for me remains that the argument that Roe's overturn is imminent depends on the belief that Kennedy has changed, and I just don't think there's any evidence that he has. To add a couple of points:
- Leaving aside the question of how "political" we can expect the Court to be, I don't understand why a politically savvy Court would wait until Democrats hostile to their views controlled every branch of the federal government to overturn Roe. I don't see how it becomes any better for the GOP to overturn Roe explicitly in 2010 than it is now. If anything, a politically savvy Court would have seen 2008 as a likely Democratic year anyway and gotten it over with if it wanted to do it.
- The idea that Roe would be explicitly overturned also ignores the extent to which Alito and Roberts have gone out of their way to nominally "uphold" precedents they're not seriously applying. If they're not willing to explicitly overturn precedents that almost nobody in the general public cares about, they're certainly not going to be anxious to do so on a high-salience issue where such an outcome would be very unpopular.
None of this is to say that I'm sanguine about women's access to abortion in this country. It's important to remember how much damage can be done to abortion access without Roe being overturned. And if a court gets more Republican appointments, that's a different matter entirely. But the Court as currently configured isn't going to explicitly announce the overruling of Roe v. Wade.
--Scott Lemieux