Barbara Pariente served on the Florida Supreme Court for more than twenty years and is now retired. She was astonished by that court’s recent decision to approve a six-week ban on abortion, because the state constitution explicitly protects privacy rights, which unquestionably—until now—included abortion decisions.
On April 1, the Florida Supreme Court, in a 6–1 ruling, overturned decades of decisions beginning in 1989 that recognized a woman’s right to choose—that is, whether to have an abortion—up to the time of viability.
Anchored in Florida’s own constitutional right to privacy, this critical individual right to abortion had been repeatedly affirmed by the state Supreme Court, which consistently struck down conflicting laws passed by the Legislature.
As explained first in 1989:
Florida’s privacy provision is clearly implicated in a woman’s decision of whether or not to continue her pregnancy. We can conceive of few more personal or private decisions concerning one’s body in the course of a lifetime.
Tellingly, the justices at the time acknowledged that their decision was based not only on U.S. Supreme Court precedent but also on Florida’s own privacy amendment.
I served on the Supreme Court of Florida beginning in 1998 and retired, based on our mandatory retirement requirement, a little more than two decades later. Whether Florida’s Constitution provided a right to privacy that encompassed abortion was never questioned, even by those who would have been deemed the most conservative justices—almost all white men back in 1989!
And strikingly, one of the conservative justices at that time stated: “If the United States Supreme Court were to subsequently recede from Roe v. Wade, this would not diminish the abortion rights now provided by the privacy amendment of the Florida Constitution.” Wow!
In 2017 I authored an opinion holding unconstitutional an additional 24-hour waiting period after a woman chooses to terminate her pregnancy. Pointing out that other medical procedures did not have such requirements, the majority opinion noted, “Women may take as long as they need to make this deeply personal decision,” adding that the additional 24 hours stipulated that the patient make a second, medically unnecessary trip, incurring additional costs and delays. The court applied what is known in constitutional law as a “strict scrutiny” test for fundamental rights.
Interestingly, Justice Charles Canady, who is still on the Florida Supreme Court and who participated in the evisceration of Florida’s privacy amendment last week, did not challenge the central point that abortion is included in an individual’s right to privacy. He dissented, not on substantive grounds but on technical grounds.
So what can explain this 180-degree turn by the current Florida Supreme Court? If I said “politics,” that answer would be insufficient, overly simplistic. Unfortunately, with this court, precedent is precedent until it is not. Perhaps each of the six justices is individually, morally or religiously, opposed to abortion.
Yet, at the same time, and on the same, by a 4–3 majority, the justices—three of whom participated in overturning precedent—voted to allow the proposed constitutional amendment on abortion to be placed on the November ballot. (The dissenters: the three female members of the Supreme Court.) That proposed constitutional amendment:
Amendment to Limit Government Interference With Abortion:
No law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider. This amendment does not change the Legislature’s constitutional authority to require notification to a parent or guardian before a minor has an abortion.
For the proposed amendment to pass and become enshrined in the state constitution, 60 percent of Florida voters must vote yes.
In approving the amendment to be placed on the ballot at the same time that it upheld Florida’s abortion bans, the court angered those who support a woman’s right to choose as well as those who are opposed to abortion. Most likely the latter groups embrace the notion that fetuses are human beings and have rights that deserve to be protected. Indeed, Chief Justice Carlos Muñiz, during oral argument on the abortion amendment case, queried the state attorney general on precisely that issue, asking if the constitutional language that defends the rights of all natural persons extends to an unborn child at any stage of pregnancy.
In fact, and most troubling, it was the three recently elevated Gov. Ron DeSantis appointees—all women—who expressed their views that the voters should not be allowed to vote on the amendment because it could impact the rights of the unborn child. Justice Jamie Grosshans, joined by Justice Meredith Sasso, expressed that the amendment was defective because it failed to disclose the potential effect on the rights of the unborn child. Justice Renatha Francis was even more direct writing in her dissent:
The exercise of a “right” to an abortion literally results in a devastating infringement on the right of another person: the right to live. And our Florida Constitution recognizes that “life” is a “basic right” for “[a]ll natural persons.” One must recognize the unborn’s competing right to life and the State’s moral duty to protect that life.
In other words the three dissenting justices would recognize that fetuses are included in who is a “natural person” under Florida’s Constitution.
What should be top of mind days after the dueling decisions? Grave concern for the women of our state who will be in limbo because, following the court’s ruling, a six-week abortion ban—before many women even know they are pregnant—will be allowed to go into effect. We know that these restrictions will disproportionately affect low-income women and those who live in rural communities.

The current leadership in Tallahassee does not care about privacy rights or most other rights of people others than DeSantis. He prefers to sign laws behind closed doors at midnight in the shadows. He does not want the people to know where money is being spent because he claims it will impede his plans. He cites his safety as the reason people in Florida cannot know his travel plans. In fact, if DeSantis had his way, there wouldn’t be a state constitution because the only thing that matters to DeSantis is his repressive, regressive agenda and making money for favored cronies. Democracy is an inconvenience for the Florida fascists.
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it looks like Florida judges are seeking to circumvent the issue of privacy in order to focus on the idea of competing individuals. However, recognizing a zygote as an individual possessing of full constitutional rights is remarkable as it is problematic. The idea that a zygote is a competing life is a religious idea, traceable to a particular form of Christianity. The acceptance of this notion may be contrary to the right of conscience and religion guaranteed in the first Amendment. I might believe that human life begins after implantation, after the crowning of the head, or after you have your first grandchild. There is no science behind any of this.
But there is more. Avoiding the issue of privacy ultimately devalues privacy as an extant principle. Perhaps this is the true goal of conservatives. Perhaps the right of privacy is odious to modern “conservatives.” Who could have guessed?
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“Perhaps this is the true goal of conservatives.”
No, it’s not conservatives who want that. It is the xtian regressive/reactionary, revanchist faith believers who appear to have that as a goal. A true conservative (which the majority here are) would understand stare decisis and precedent.
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precisely why I put conservatives in quotes. The modern right wing has co-opted a term that does not apply to the moral majority types.
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I’d say that it definitely applies to the moral majority types.
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In Florida the MAGA extremists are primarying the traditional small government conservatives in an attempt to grab more power.
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The MAGA are not conservative at all.
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Duane, you are quite right. We should stop referring to MAGA zealots as “conservatives.” They are not. They are extremists. Nothing conservative about them.
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The right wing often gives lip service to privacy, but what they really care about is power and wealth. They claim to care about children, but apparently not as much as unborn fetuses. They have no problem sending children as young as fourteen off to work, perhaps in a dangerous job. They claim to be patriots, but they vote against every bill for veterans and their benefits. They blindly follow a Russian sympathizing demagogue while many of them think the federal government is an enemy of the people. The serial hypocrisy of so many on the right is astounding.
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privacy is for corporations that want to donate to or buy political leaders out of the public eye, not for women m as king a gut wrenching decision
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First, the dangerously toxic, extreme right nutter majority on the U.S. Supreme Court made corporations into individuals through Citizens United.
Now, state-based nutters, thanks to the those nutters on the US Supreme Court, ruling in Dodds vs jackson Women’s health Organization, have been given a green light to give fetuses the rights of a living individual while taking away the rights of pregnant women who are actually living individuals old enough to get pregnant.
“For the first 12 hours after conception, the fertilized egg remains a single cell. After 30 hours or so, it divides from one cell into two. Some 15 hours later, the two cells divide to become four. And at the end of 3 days, the fertilized egg cell has become a berry-like structure made up of 16 cells.”
“Assuming that consciousness is mainly localized in the cortex, consciousness cannot emerge before 24 gestational weeks when the thalamocortical connections from the sense organs are established.”
“A newborn baby has about 26,000,000,000 (billion – not trillion) cells.”
“In an effort that began more than ten years ago, scientists have estimated just how many cells make up the human body: Using data from more than 1,500 published sources, researchers determined that men are composed of about 36 trillion cells, women have some 28 trillion cells, and a 10-year-old child has roughly 17 trillion cells.”
So, in red states that pass these nutter laws, a single cell at conception is more valuable than a pregnant female with an educated, conscious brain, who is capable of emotions like love, depression, hate, happiness et al, has an individual personality, and a functioning heart with a living body that has “some 28 trillion cells.”
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Florida Repugnicans are going to terminate their control of the state with these obscene actions re abortion. People are going to get all Sapiens and kick the knuckle-draggers out.
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DeSantis just signed a law that shuts down a public school after two years of so-called failing scores without any involvement from the local board of education. He is bypassing local governance entirely because he doesn’t like the “back and forth” we like to call democracy. He is consolidating power in the state according to his plan and his rules.
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He’s truly evil. And breathtakingly stupid.
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Retired Teacher
This an example of Big-government conservatism. Remember when the right favored local control?
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Florida has some beautiful beaches. It has some nice people. But, my-oh-my, there is some genuine craziness lurking there. How else to explain this, from USA Today:
“Among all Floridians 18 and older, DeSantis is viewed favorably by 47% and Trump 42%…Both Republicans fared better than President Joe Biden, who is viewed favorably by 34% of Floridians.”
As Peter Wehner just explained in The Atlantic, Trump is
“a man who, among other things, attempted to overturn an election, summoned and assembled a violent mob and directed it to march on the Capitol, and encouraged the mob to hang his vice president. He sexually assaulted and defamed a woman, paid hush money to a porn star, and allegedly falsified records to cover up the affair. Trump controlled two entities that were found guilty of 17 counts of criminal tax fraud and falsifying business records. He invited a hostile foreign power (Russia) to interfere in one American election and attempted to extort an allied nation (Ukraine) to interfere in another four years later. He has threatened prosecutors, judges, and the families of judges. And he has been indicted in four separate criminal cases…”
And DeSantis? Are Floridians NOT paying attention? Even the far-right Center for Freedom and Prosperity — which seems to believe only in “freedom and prosperity” for corporations and the wealthy — rated him as a middling so-so “C” governor. Long-time journalist William Kleinknecht described the DeSantis tenure succinctly:
“Florida continues to languish toward the bottom of state rankings assessing the quality of health care, school funding, long-term elder care, and other areas key to a successful society…[it’s] where teachers’ salaries are among the lowest in the nation, unemployment benefits are stingier than in any other state, and wage theft flourishes with little interference from the DeSantis administration…DeSantis weaponizes the cultural wars to distract attention from the core missions of his governorship, which is to starve programs geared toward bettering the lives of ordinary citizens so he can maintain low taxes on the wealthy and corporations. Florida is the ideal haven for privileged Americans who don’t want to pay their fair share of taxes. It has no income tax for individuals, and its corporate tax rate of 5.5% is among the lowest in the nation. An investigation by the Orlando Sentinel in late 2019 revealed the startling fact that 99% of Florida’s companies paid no corporate income tax, abetted by tax-avoidance schemes and state officials who gave a low priority to enforcing tax laws.”
Another journalist delineated DeSantis this way:
“DeSantis is a politician who preaches freedom while suspending elected officials who offend him, banning classroom discussions he doesn’t like, carrying out hostile takeovers of state universities, and obstructing the release of public records whenever he can.”
As loathsome as he is, DeSantis is merely on Republican Team B. Team A, of course is Trump and his closest “associates.”
What does all of this say about those people who vote Republican?
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