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Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson

No. 21-463 SCOTUS · Decided Decided SCOTUS
Cert Granted: Oct 18, 2021 Argued: Nov 1, 2021 Decided: Dec 10, 2021

Case Overview

Texas passed S.B. 8, a six-week abortion ban enforced entirely by private citizens—anyone could sue abortion providers for $10,000 per procedure, but no state official was directly involved in enforcement. The structure was deliberate: without a state official to sue, abortion providers couldn't get into federal court to challenge before it took effect. The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that providers could sue state licensing officials, but not state court judges or clerks. S.B. 8 effectively remained operational. Bryan covers it as the enforcement mechanism that partially worked as designed and as the template other states attempted to copy.


The Conclusion

The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that abortion providers could sue state licensing officials to challenge S.B. 8. However, because providers could not sue state court judges or clerks who processed private enforcement lawsuits, the law remained operational as written, a structure that effectively insulated the ban from federal court review.

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
Filed -
Judge -
CL StatusActive
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Cert GrantedOct 18, 2021
StatusActive
Filed (CL) -
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SCOTUS TMR-dc7926fd Jul 13, 2026
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