Chuck Darwin<p>But even as Currie proudly championed the bill, she would not know the full story behind it until after Roe fell more than five years later. </p><p>In an interview, she explained that she thought her vision for a 15-week cutoff, <br />rooted in her foundational story of the beating fetal heart, <br />had driven the plan. </p><p>No one had told her that A.D.F. had coordinated its strategy with Taylor before their meeting, <br />or that 15 weeks was part of its specific legal plan to undermine Roe, she said. </p><p>Or that Tseytlin had brainstormed this possibility at Leonard Leo’s Federalist Society cocktail hour <br />and advanced it at an upscale California resort alongside Republican leaders and attorneys.</p><p>When Gov. Phil Bryant of Mississippi signed the bill into law, with Currie smiling next to him, <br />it became the tightest restriction on abortion in the nation. </p><p>It made no exceptions for rape or incest, just a narrow provision to preserve the life of the woman or in cases of “severe” fetal abnormality. </p><p>Less than an hour later, Jackson Women’s Health Organization<br /> — the Pink House<br /> — filed a lawsuit through their attorneys at the Center for Reproductive Rights. </p><p>The Pink House performed abortions only until 16 weeks of pregnancy, <br />the center’s lawyers wrote, <br />and had done just 78 abortions when the fetus was identified as being 15 weeks or older in 2017.</p><p>Going after that small fraction, of course, was exactly the plan. </p><p>Not too early in pregnancy and not too late, <br />but exactly the line that might compel the Supreme Court to wade back into the subject of abortion. </p><p>“We were seeking to be incremental and strategic,” Taylor said. </p><p>Christian activists, he said, were learning to control their “moral passion” so as not to lose sight of their long-term goal.</p><p>There were still so many unknowns. </p><p>For the law to serve its intended purpose, anti-abortion activists needed a majority on the Supreme Court. </p><p>A.D.F. attorneys and their allies like Tseytlin had designed the legislation to target Kennedy, <br />but what they couldn’t foresee was that Kennedy would retire that summer, <br />allowing Trump to fill a second seat, <br />this time with Brett <a href="https://c.im/tags/Kavanaugh" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Kavanaugh</span></a>. </p><p>Now conservatives had a 5-4 split on the Supreme Court, <br />with Kavanaugh joining Roberts, Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. </p><p>And there was more to come.</p><p>“As a Christian,” Currie said, “sometimes you don’t know God’s plan, and he kind of makes things happen.”</p><p>In her Virginia office just across the Potomac River from Washington, <br />Marjorie Dannenfelser, of the Susan B. Anthony List <br />(now known as Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America) <br />and the A.D.F. board, <br />had a detailed map drawn on a wall-size whiteboard. </p><p>From a distance, it looked like the kind used by political campaigns to track polling and turnout, swing districts and congressional votes. <br /> <br />But this one was color-coded to indicate states where Republicans held both the state legislature and the governor’s mansion <br />and was partitioned by circuit-court-of-appeals jurisdiction. </p><p>By early 2019, Republicans held complete control of state governments in 22 states, <br />giving them total power over abortion legislation. </p><p>Some 20 cases, with different legal strategies to gut Roe and Casey, were in litigation in lower courts. </p><p>A magenta triangle meant the state had passed a <br />“heartbeat bill,” <br />generally a ban that started around six weeks; <br />a green square signified a “pain-capable” abortion law, <br />typically a 20-week ban. </p><p>Red stars showed the federal appeals courts where judges nominated by Republicans outnumbered those nominated by Democrats <br />— of the 11 on the board, they controlled seven. </p><p>It was a map of how all the laws were moving up toward the ultimate court that mattered.</p><p>And now, on Sept. 18, 2020, <br />with the news of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, <br />Dannenfelser and her compatriots could capture another majority. </p><p>The kind of Supreme Court supermajority that could take down Roe.</p><p>(7/n)</p><p> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Currie" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Currie</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Taylor" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Taylor</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Fiedorek" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Fiedorek</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Burke" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Burke</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Dannenfelser" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Dannenfelser</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/AllianceDefendingFreedom" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>AllianceDefendingFreedom</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/fedsoc" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>fedsoc</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/FederalistSociety" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>FederalistSociety</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/viability" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>viability</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Roberts" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Roberts</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Kennedy" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Kennedy</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Alito" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Alito</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Leonard" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Leonard</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Leo" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Leo</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Misha" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Misha</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Tseytlin" class="mention hashtag" rel="tag">#<span>Tseytlin</span></a></p>