Justice Thomas urges Supreme Court to reconsider free speech rules near abortion clinics [View all]
19 hours ago - Politics & Policy
Justice Thomas urges Supreme Court to reconsider free speech rules near abortion clinics
Sareen Habeshian
Justice Clarence Thomas issued a scathing dissent Monday after the Supreme Court declined to hear a case challenging free speech rights around abortion clinics, suggesting he wants to revisit the matter after the court ended the federal constitutional right to abortion in 2022.
The big picture: The high court's move marked a loss for abortion opponents who claimed their First Amendment rights are violated by laws that limit demonstrations near clinics.
• The Supreme Court majority did not explain their decision Monday in finding that the rules were in line with precedent set by
Hill v. Colorado (2000). In that case, the high court held that the restrictions on speech-related conduct are constitutional because they regulate the places where some speech may occur, and not the speech itself.
Zoom in: Both Thomas and Justice Samuel Alito dissented, but only the former conservative justice filed writing explaining his reasoning.
• Thomas argued against the high court's decision not to revisit precedent set in
Hill v. Colorado (2000), which upheld free speech in buffer zones around abortion clinics.
• "I would have taken this opportunity to explicitly overrule
Hill," he wrote in his dissent.
• He argued the court erroneously treated the
Hill case differently than others pertaining to the First Amendment because abortion was involved, writing, "
Hill's abortion exceptionalism turned the First Amendment upside down."
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