Supreme Court divid­ed over state effort to defund Planned Par­ent­hood

The Supreme Court appeared divid­ed Wednes­day over whether a state can block Med­ic­aid fund­ing for Planned Par­ent­hood clin­ics, in a tech­ni­cal inter­pre­ta­tion over health­care choic­es that has become a larg­er polit­i­cal fight over abor­tion access.

In near­ly two hours of oral argu­ments, the court’s con­ser­v­a­tive major­i­ty offered mea­sured sup­port for South Car­oli­na’s posi­tion.

The spe­cif­ic issue is whether low-income Med­ic­aid patients can sue in order to choose their own qual­i­fied health­care provider. The fed­er­al-state pro­gram has shared respon­si­bil­i­ty for fund­ing and admin­is­ter­ing it, through pri­vate health­care providers.

Fed­er­al law bans tax­pay­er mon­ey from going to fund almost all abor­tions, but Planned Par­ent­hood also pro­vides a range of oth­er med­ical ser­vices with and with­out Med­ic­aid sub­si­dies, includ­ing gyne­co­log­i­cal care and can­cer screen­ings.

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Block­ing the provider from Med­ic­aid net­works could effec­tive­ly defund it. Giv­en the divi­sive under­ly­ing issue of abor­tion, groups on both sides ral­lied out­side the high court ahead of the argu­ments. 

The state’s gov­er­nor in 2018 signed an exec­u­tive order block­ing Med­ic­aid fund­ing for the state’s two Planned Par­ent­hood clin­ics, say­ing it amount­ed to tax­pay­ers sub­si­diz­ing abor­tions. 

Courts have put that order on hold, lead­ing to the cur­rent case. 

South Car­oli­na now bans abor­tion around six weeks of preg­nan­cy, or when car­diac activ­i­ty is detect­ed, with lim­it­ed excep­tions. 

The key pro­vi­sion in the 1965 Med­ic­aid Act guar­an­tees patients a “free choice of provider” that is will­ing and qual­i­fied. 

Much of the court ses­sion dealt with whether Planned Par­ent­hood was a “qual­i­fied provider” under the Med­ic­aid law, and whether indi­vid­ual patients have an unam­bigu­ous “right” to sue to see their provider of choice, under its spe­cif­ic lan­guage.

“It seems a lit­tle bit odd to think that a prob­lem that moti­vat­ed Con­gress to pass this pro­vi­sion was that states were lim­it­ing the choic­es peo­ple had,” said Jus­tice Sonia Sotomay­or. “It seems hard to under­stand that states did­n’t under­stand that they had to give indi­vid­u­als the right to choose a provider.”

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“The state has an oblig­a­tion to ensure that a per­son… has a right to choose their doc­tor,” added Jus­tice Ele­na Kagan. “It’s impos­si­ble to even say the thing with­out using the word ‘right.’ ”

But some con­ser­v­a­tive jus­tices ques­tioned how to inter­pret a pro­vi­sion that does not con­tain the word “right.”

“One can imag­ine a statute writ­ten as an indi­vid­ual ben­e­fit that’s manda­to­ry on the states but isn’t right-cre­at­ing” for the patient, said Jus­tice Neil Gor­such. “I mean, that’s an imag­in­able sce­nario.” 

Jus­tice Samuel Ali­to added it was “some­thing that’s quite extra­or­di­nary” to give indi­vid­u­als that right to sue under the Con­sti­tu­tion’s spend­ing clause. 

The votes of Chief Jus­tice John Roberts and Jus­tice Amy Coney Bar­rett could be key: They asked tough ques­tions of both sides.

Bar­rett offered a hypo­thet­i­cal of the right of a patient to go to court over their doc­tor accused of med­ical mal­prac­tice. “Does it make sense in that cir­cum­stance for Con­gress to want plain­tiffs to be able to sue?” she asked.

Planned Par­ent­hood says its future is at stake, not­ing near­ly $700 mil­lion – about a third of its over­all nation­wide rev­enue – orig­i­nates from Med­ic­aid reim­burse­ments, and gov­ern­ment grants and con­tracts.

But the group notes just $90,000 in Med­ic­aid fund­ing goes to Planned Par­ent­hood facil­i­ties every year in South Car­oli­na, which is com­par­a­tive­ly small to the state’s total Med­ic­aid spend­ing.

Julie Edwards, a South Car­oli­na res­i­dent, sued along with Planned Par­ent­hood South Atlantic, which oper­ates two clin­ics in Colum­bia and Charleston. She has type‑1 dia­betes and asso­ci­at­ed med­ical com­pli­ca­tions and want­ed to choose the Colum­bia clin­ic for its range of ser­vices, includ­ing repro­duc­tive care. 

A fed­er­al appeals court ruled against the state in 2024, con­clud­ing the “free choice of provider” pro­vi­sion “spec­i­fies an enti­tle­ment giv­en to each Med­ic­aid ben­e­fi­cia­ry: to choose one’s pre­ferred qual­i­fied provider with­out state inter­fer­ence.”

In a 2023 Supreme Court opin­ion involv­ing care for nurs­ing home res­i­dents, the jus­tices con­clud­ed that a dif­fer­ent law from Med­ic­aid gives indi­vid­u­als the right to sue. 

A year ear­li­er, the high court over­turned its Roe v. Wade prece­dent of a nation­wide right to abor­tion.

Sev­er­al states – includ­ing Texas, Mis­souri and Arkansas – have already done what South Car­oli­na wants to do by cut­ting Med­ic­aid fund­ing to Planned Par­ent­hood and more could fol­low if South Car­oli­na pre­vails. 

“The peo­ple in this state do not want their tax mon­ey to go to that orga­ni­za­tion,” said Repub­li­can South Car­oli­na Gov. Hen­ry McMas­ter, who attend­ed the oral argu­ment. “I believe the deci­sion of this court will be that the peo­ple of South Car­oli­na have the right to make this deci­sion for them­selves, for our state. Oth­er states may make a dif­fer­ent deci­sion, but not ours. South Car­oli­na stands for the right to life, and we’ll do what­ev­er is nec­es­sary to pro­tect that.”

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The Trump Jus­tice Depart­ment is sup­port­ing the state, and abor­tion rights groups say the issue is about patient choice.

“Our health cen­ters serve an irre­place­able role in the state’s health­care sys­tem, pro­vid­ing birth con­trol and can­cer screen­ings to peo­ple who can’t afford those ser­vices any­where else,” said Paige John­son, inter­im pres­i­dent and CEO of Planned Par­ent­hood South Atlantic. “Gov­ern­ment offi­cials should nev­er block peo­ple from get­ting health­care or be able to decide which doc­tor you can or can­not see.” 

One con­cern raised by health­care advo­cates is find­ing gyne­co­log­i­cal and fam­i­ly plan­ning ser­vices in states with lim­it­ed facil­i­ties. Low-income women often have greater dif­fi­cul­ty trav­el­ing long dis­tances to get such qual­i­ty care, a require­ment for Med­ic­aid providers.

Jus­tice Brett Kavanaugh said he would make it his mis­sion to bring as much clar­i­ty over when patients can go to court, which he called a 45-year “odyssey.”

Much of the pub­lic argu­ments dealt with whether a “right” to sue was a mag­ic word to auto­mat­i­cal­ly decide the mat­ter.

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“I’m not aller­gic to mag­ic words, because mag­ic words – if they rep­re­sent the prin­ci­ple – will pro­vide the clar­i­ty that will avoid the lit­i­ga­tion that is a huge waste of resources for states, courts, providers, ben­e­fi­cia­ries.”

The case is Med­i­na (SC DOH) v. Planned Par­ent­hood South Atlantic (23–1275). A rul­ing is like­ly by ear­ly sum­mer.