“Roe was egregiously wrong from the start,” Alito, who authored the opinion, wrote. On Friday, in a 6-3 ruling, the court overturned those precedents, allowing states to set their own laws regulating abortion. Jackson Women's Health Organization, a case about a 15-week abortion ban in Mississippi, taking the opportunity to reconsider Roe and Casey entirely. Casey.Īnd then, in its latest term, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Dobbs v. Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed at various points in the yearslong legal proceedings, specifically disputing whether driving more than 150 miles to access an abortion clinic qualified as an “undue burden” under the framework laid out in Planned Parenthood v. District Judge Lee Yeakel and the 5th U.S. Rick Perry.īefore the law even went into effect, abortion providers filed a legal challenge, claiming that the majority of the state’s 40 clinics would shut down if these requirements went into effect, creating an undue burden on Texans seeking abortions.įrom the start, the case focused on the definition of that term: “undue burden.” U.S. Wendy Davis’ famous 13-hour filibuster, but it eventually passed both houses and was signed into law by then-Gov. In 2013, the state passed an omnibus abortion bill that banned abortions after 20 weeks of gestation, imposed new regulations on medication abortion, required abortion providers to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals and required all abortion facilities to meet the regulatory standards for ambulatory surgical centers, arguing that these requirements protected patient health and safety.