If the Court said that there was no constitutional matter, then that itself is a constitutional matter, that can't be changed by a simple majority vote in the legislature.
What is or isn't in the Constitution is dictated by the Constitution.
If people want to make it into a constitutional matter then they need to amend the Constitution to put it in there.
Read the opinions. SCOTUS explicitly says in the decision that the matter needs to be taken up by lawmakers, not the court.
The Constitution gives Congress the power to regulate in this area (according to previous court decisions), so congress can pass a law that regulates it.
It's the same way that Congress regulates anything else.
Sounds like you're just doubling down saying it's a constitutional matter to say what is a constitutional matter, which is what I'm saying.
@volkris
>"You can't overturn a constitutional matter with a simple majority of one house of the legislature."
What Constitutional matter? The court just said that there was no Constitutional matter. That was what Dobbs was all about -- they said there in nothing in the Constitution about abortion.
So congress can pass a law about it, as long as they don't violate some other provision of the Constitution.
And we're not talking about one chamber. We're talking about a majority in each house, without a veto from POTUS. That's how laws are made.