In the inaugural volume of this journal Peter Russell of the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto noted that the political science community, after nearly fifty years of blindness to judicial power, had begun to regain an appreciation of the courts' political significance. Despite this reawakening, certain legal subjects very germane to political science still tend to be the preserve of legal academics. One such subject is judicial review, more specifically the impact of judicial review upon policy outcomes. To date, arguably the most detailed and valuable commentary on this topic is offered by a legal scholar, Patrick Monahan. In Politics and the Constitution, Monahan suggests that judicial review is not as universally consequential as we might expect. For him, the instrumental impact of judicial review varies according to whether it is based on the law of federalism or on the Charter of Rights. He believes that, for reasons to be outlined shortly, Charter review is likely to have a greater substantive impact than federalism review. In this article, I use a discussion of Alberta's reaction to the 1988 decision in Morgentaler, Smoling, and Scott v. The Queen to question this conclusion. This decision on abortion provides an excellent example of how federalism may temper the substantive impact of Charter review. The reaction of Alberta to the Court's judgement demonstrates how the intergovernmental interdependence typical of Canadian federalism may dilute or at the very least delay the consequences of Charter review for policy outcomes.