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McClellan, Spanberger work to repeal parts of 19th century law that could ban abortion nationally

This article was reprinted with permission from .听

Democrats are finally talking about the Comstock Act 鈥 and they are finally trying to repeal it.

The act is a dormant 19th century federal law that鈥檚 still technically on the books and could be used to implement a national abortion ban. Named for activist Anthony Comstock who pushed for it, the 1873聽聽prohibits the mailing of聽鈥渆very article or thing designed, adapted, or intended for producing abortion, or for any indecent or immoral use.鈥

Dubbed the 鈥淪top Comstock Act,鈥 U.S. Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., announced legislation last week that would repeal portions of it. A House version of the bill is co-sponsored by Virginia Reps. Jennifer McClellan, D-Richmond and Abigail Spanberger, D-Henrico.

More broadly, the Gilded Age-era law focuses on obscene materials such as pornography, but other provisions of it have included abortifacients and contraception. The contraception components were stripped away over the years. While its abortion components have not been enforced, the law has been used in child pornography prosecutions.

聽from decades ago to repeal the abortion components of the act have failed and McClellan was candid about how her bill may not see success in the U.S. House right away due to its current GOP control.

鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 mean we don鈥檛 start fighting,鈥 McClellan said, noting how it took her about a decade to pass legislation to remove abortion barriers when she was a state senator in Virginia. 鈥淗opefully it will be the next Congress, under Speaker Hakeem Jeffries, that we pass that bill.鈥

Jeffries, the House Minority leader from New York, stands to become the next Speaker of the House if Democrats are able to take control of the chamber in this year鈥檚 elections.

Showing their work on Comstock can help Democrats communicate about threats to abortion access amid this year鈥檚 presidential and congressional elections, said Erin Covey, an analyst for the Cook Political Report.

鈥淚 think the reason that this is coming up now is because we鈥檙e getting closer to the presidential election,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he potential reality of a second Trump term is something that Democrats in Congress are reckoning with right now.鈥

Why does this particular law matter?

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has聽聽how his Supreme Court picks during his presidency ushered in the fall of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court ruling that federally protected abortion for nearly 50 years. With speculation at how far he would seek to regulate abortion, he鈥檚 said different things in interviews with national press over the past year.

While President Joe Biden has made abortion protection a pillar of his re-election campaign, Trump has made聽聽ranging from supporting a national 15 or 16 week ban, to leaving regulation to the states, and 鈥渇eeling 鈥渟trongly鈥 about Comstock.

In an聽, he said he鈥檇 have a 鈥渂ig statement鈥 within two weeks, but he never did.

He also said earlier this month that he would 鈥溾澛爓ith a group that wants to see abortion 鈥渆radicated.鈥

And though Comstock鈥檚 abortion provisions were not enforced during the nearly 50 years of Roe, it has been a looming specter for the abortion rights movement all along. Activists and legal scholars have cautioned about its potential as it is still technically on the books.

It was a Trump-appointed Texas鈥 judge鈥檚 interpretation of Comstock that helped propel the Federal Drug Administration v Alliance For Hippocratic Medicine to the U.S. Supreme Court. Though the Supreme Court, which has several Trump appointees, did not rule in the Alliance鈥檚 favor, they kicked the case back down to lower courts where it will continue to be litigated.

Most directly, the Comstock Act applies to mailing abortion medication, but some think it can be interpreted further to prohibit transport of supplies to establish abortion clinics.

While 鈥渘ot literally a ban,鈥 legal historian Mary Ziegler explained how abortion opponents can interpret it to be used as one.

鈥淭he question is, if you can鈥檛 put anything in the mail or through a common carrier or potentially into interstate commerce, then how do you get surgical tools or whatever? How do you get any of the items you would need?鈥 she said.

颁辞尘蝉迟辞肠办鈥檚听聽appears in a conservative manifesto called 鈥淧roject 2025鈥 that Trump could tap into should he win a second term.

Chapter 14 of the policy guidebook by conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation recommends that promotion and approval of mail-order abortion medications cease and alleges they are 鈥渋n violation of long-standing federal laws that prohibit the mailing and interstate carriage of abortion drugs.鈥 Comstock鈥檚 legal code is then cited in footnote number 16.

Local government officials have tried for years to use Comstock to limit abortions in their communities.

The law has surfaced in local ordinances around the country, such as in Virginia where it was聽聽last year and in New Mexico where聽聽have ascended to the state鈥檚 supreme court.

Assisted by former Texas Solicitor General Jonathan Mitchell, Texas activist Mark Lee Dickson has聽. Dickson also has said that they offer legal representation to localities that聽

Be it Trump utilizing Comstock if elected, or legal challenges progressing successfully in Dickson鈥檚 favor through courts, Dickson鈥檚 confident it can be a path for a national ban.

鈥淚f enforced, it would have the same impact as a national ban on abortion,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat is because it is a de-facto national abortion ban.鈥

Legal historian Lauren MacIver Thompson, who specializes in Comstock, echoed Ziegler鈥檚 theory of how that could work.

鈥淚f Trump is reelected, (abortion opponents) basically have a clear path to enforce it with a newly re-formed Department of Justice,鈥 said legal historian Lauren MacIver Thompson. 鈥淭hey can kind of read the act however they want it to be read.鈥

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