WASHINGTON — A divided Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that states can block the country’s biggest abortion provider, Planned Parenthood, from receiving Medicaid money for health services such as contraception and cancer screenings.
The 6-3 opinion authored by Justice Neil Gorsuch and joined by the rest of the court’s conservatives was not directly about abortion, but it comes as Republicans back a wider push across the country to defund the organization. It closes off Planned Parenthood’s primary court path to keeping Medicaid funding in place: lawsuits from patients.
While Medicaid law allows people choose their own provider, it doesn’t make that a right enforceable in court, the justices found.
Public health care money generally can’t be used to pay for abortions, but Medicaid patients go to Planned Parenthood for other needs in part because it can be tough to find a doctor who takes the publicly funded insurance, the organization has said.
Tonya Tucker, the Interim President and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Illinois, said the ruling is a blow to patients on Medicaid across the country. She said patients they serve in Illinois rely on Medicaid to access care for birth control, STI testing and treatment, cancer screenings and abortion care.
“Today’s ruling sets a troubling precedent that extends far beyond South Carolina, especially as Congress considers a federal budget that bans Medicaid patients nationwide from accessing care at Planned Parenthood health centers,” Tucker said in a statement.
South Carolina’s Republican governor says no taxpayer money should go Planned Parenthood. The budget bill backed by President Donald Trump in Congress would also cut Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood. That could force the closure of about 200 centers, most of them in states where abortion is legal, the organization has said.
Gov. Henry McMaster first moved to cut off Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood in 2018 but was blocked in court after a lawsuit from a patient named Julie Edwards. She wanted to keep going there for birth control because her diabetes makes pregnancy potentially dangerous, so she sued over a provision in Medicaid law that allows patients to choose their own qualified provider.
South Carolina, though, argued that patients shouldn’t be able to file those lawsuits. The state pointed to lower courts that have been swayed by similar arguments and allowed states such as Texas to block Medicaid funding from Planned Parenthood.
The high court majority agreed. “Deciding whether to permit private enforcement poses delicate policy questions involving competing costs and benefits — decisions for elected representatives, not judges,” Gorsuch wrote. Patients can appeal through other administrative processes if coverage is denied, he pointed out.
McMaster applauded the high court’s ruling. “Seven years ago, we took a stand to protect the sanctity of life and defend South Carolina’s authority and values — and today, we are finally victorious,” he said in a statement.
In a dissent joined by her liberal colleagues, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said the ruling is “likely to result in tangible harm to real people.”
“It will strip those South Carolinians — and countless other Medicaid recipients around the country — of a deeply personal freedom: the ‘ability to decide who treats us at our most vulnerable,'” she wrote.
Other states could now follow South Carolina’s lead and cut out Planned Parenthood from public programs, said Destiny Lopez, the CEO and co-president of the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion rights.
“This is a systematic decimation of access to reproductive health care and a signifier of what else is likely to come,” she said.
Public health groups like the American Cancer Society have said in court papers that lawsuits are the only real way that Medicaid patients have been able to enforce their ability to choose their own doctor. Losing that ability would reduce access to health care for people on the program, which is estimated to include one-quarter of everyone in the country. Rural areas could be especially affected, advocates said in court papers.
“This is yet another shameful ruling that inserts the government directly between a patient and their doctor — just like Dobbs three years ago and Skrmetti last week. Intimate, personal decisions about health care shouldn’t require sign off from extremist politicians,” U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said in a statement in response to the high court’s decision. “Each and every action taken by anti-choice extremists threatens the life of someone you know. Eventually, the tides must turn — and we must protect health care for all.”
In South Carolina, $90,000 in Medicaid funding goes to Planned Parenthood every year, a tiny fraction of the state’s total Medicaid spending. The state banned abortion at about six weeks’ gestation after the high court overturned it as a nationwide right in 2022. The state says other providers can fill a health care void left by Planned Parenthood’s removal from Medicaid.