
The right to a safe, legal abortion hangs by a thread in the Supreme Court. The last abortion rights case, Stenberg v. Carhart, was decided by a narrow 5-4 pro-choice majority. What's more, other critical women's rights and civil rights cases have been decided by narrow vote margins in the current Supreme Court, including affirmative action, family and medical leave, and women's equal educational opportunities (Title IX).
President Bush has kept his promise that he would appoint justices in the mold of Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, two of the most ardently anti-choice and anti-women's rights justices on the Supreme Court. With Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito on the court, the balance of the Supreme Court has been shifted.
In response to the confirmation of Alito, Feminist Majority President Eleanor Smeal said, "Instead of reaching out to women and/or people of color to make the Supreme Court more diverse and representative, Bush has slammed the door in the face of women and minorities. He has appointed a man who would turn back the clock on women's rights and civil rights."
Bush has now returned his attention to the packing of the lower federal courts with far-right judges as he relentlessly pushes the most extreme nominees for lifetime terms on these critical appellate courts.
The New Supreme Court Justices
Samuel Alito
Confirmed to the Supreme Court by a 58-42 vote in the Senate, the closest vote on a Supreme Court nominee since Clarence Thomas (52-48), Samuel Alito has demonstrated hostility to women's rights, civil rights, workers' rights, separation of church and state, and privacy rights.
Learn more about the confirmation battle over Samuel Alito here.
Read news about Samuel Alito.
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