What does Anthony Kennedy have to do with your birth control?

More than you think!

This week, Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement. Kennedy has been the swing vote on the high court for decades. In most narrow 5-4 decisions, it was Kennedy who often determined the outcome. For example, the right to gay marriage is due to a Kennedy vote. Kennedy swung right as often as he swung left, and most recently—and unfortunately—he was the deciding vote striking down a California law that sought to prevent fake women’s health clinics from deceiving women about the services they do and do not offer.

And now here’s one more important thing at stake with potential nominees to replace Kennedy—your access to birth control!

What does the Supreme Court have to do with birth control, you might ask? A lot. It was a landmark Supreme Court case, Griswold v. Connecticut, which first gave married women the right to use birth control in 1965. Single women didn’t gain that legal right until a subsequent case, Eisenstadt v. Baird, was decided in 1972. All my single ladies, you read that correctly. Your right to legally use birth control has only existed for a short 46 years.

To those who say that’s ancient history, think again. The Supreme Court has made recent decisions that impact your coverage and access to birth control, and more cases are likely to come before the Court. For example, in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that a family-owned company could not be required to cover contraception in employee health plans if the owners objected on religious grounds. That means people covered by those plans not only lost no co-pay coverage of birth control, they lost any coverage for some or all methods of birth control. Also, it was the Supreme Court that protected health care coverage and no co-pay contraception for millions of people when it upheld the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

And there are additional important decisions on the horizon:

  • In October 2017, the Trump Administration released two new rules that allow any employer with religious or moral objections to not have to cover contraception in their insurance plans. Multiple lawsuits have been filed challenging these rules, so for now, no co-pay coverage of the full range of birth control methods is still required for most plans. However, it’s likely that this issue will ultimately end up before the Supreme Court.
  • Then there’s the newly proposed domestic gag rule, which if implemented, will make low-income women’s access to birth control even more difficult than it is today. That and other efforts to destroy the nation’s publicly funded family planning program, Title X, could one day end up before the court.
  • We also have not seen the last of attempts to repeal or gut the ACA, and with it the contraceptive coverage of millions of people.

All of these cases are likely to go to the high court.

So, long story short, we need you. It will take all of us working together to protect access to birth control. If you love your birth control, you need to make your voice heard now. Get educated, call your senators (only the Senate is responsible for approving or not approving Supreme Court nominees) and tell them birth control matters to you—and consequently, it matters who they approve to sit on the Supreme Court.

And if you want to help even more? Donate and give us the power to fight for your birth control rights!

— Rachel Fey is director of public policy at Power to Decide

Want to learn more?

Select one of the related topics to find more.