On Monday, the nine justices of
the US supreme court will take their seats at
the start of a new judicial year, even as the shock waves of the panel’s
previous seismic term continue to reverberate across America.
In their first full term that
ended in June, the court’s new six-to-three hard-right supermajority astounded
the nation by tearing up decades of settled law. They eviscerated the right to an abortion,
loosened America’s already lax gun laws, erected
roadblocks to combating the climate crisis,
and awarded religious groups greater say in public life.
The fallout of the spate of
extreme rightwing rulings has shaken public confidence in the political
neutrality of the court. A Gallup poll this week
found that fewer than half of US adults trust it – a drop of 20 points in just
two years and the lowest rating since Gallup began recording the trend in 1972.
Justices have begun to respond
to the pressure by sparring openly in public. The Wall Street Journal reported that in recent
speeches the liberal justice Elena Kagan has accused her conservative peers of
damaging the credibility of the court by embracing Republican causes.
Samuel Alito, who wrote the
decision overturning the right to an abortion in Roe v Wade, counter-accused
Kagan (whom he did not name) of crossing “an important line” by implying the
court was becoming illegitimate.
To add insult to injury, Ginni
Thomas, the extreme conservative activist married to Justice Clarence
Thomas, was questioned on Thursday by
the House committee investigating Donald Trump’s attempt to subvert the 2020
presidential election result, which she avidly encouraged.
With so much discord in plain
sight, you might have expected the new supermajority created under Trump to opt
for a calmer year ahead. No chance. The choice of cases to be decided in
the new term spells full steam ahead. “I see no signs of them slowing down,”
said Tara Groves, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
“The supreme court has chosen to
take on cases this term that raise a lot of hot-button issues – just after they
decided a bunch of cases that raised a lot of hot-button issues.” From
fundamental aspects of American democracy to LGBTQ+ equality, and the electoral
power of racial minorities to protecting the environment, the conservative
justices have selected a whole new slew of targets that fall squarely within
Republican priorities. The schedule for the first two days of oral arguments
this week tells the story.
On Monday morning, the court
will fling itself into the thick of environmental controversy in the latest
case threatening the ability of the federal government to counter pollution.
Having curtailed in June the
ability of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to curb emissions causing planet
heating, the court will now hear arguments in Sackett v EPA, which has
the potential to whittle down the agency’s powers to uphold clean water standards.
Then on Tuesday, the court
enters blockbuster territory with Merrill v Milligan. That case could topple the last
remaining pillar of the Voting Rights Act, which has safeguarded the democratic
rights of African American and other minority citizens for the past 57
years. As Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center for Justice,
put it in a briefing this week, the case adds to the court’s upcoming docket “the
raw issue of race in America”.
Merrill v Milligan concerns
Alabama, where Republican lawmakers want to draw up congressional district maps
that would give Black voters the power to send just one African American member
to Congress out of a total of seven representatives, even though Black
Alabamans make up a quarter of the state’s population. The map was blocked by
three federal judges who ruled that it was racially discriminatory and that the
state had engaged in racial gerrymandering.
In its brief to the supreme court,
Alabama effectively invites the conservative justices to make it virtually
impossible to challenge racial gerrymandering. Should the state’s view prevail,
challengers would have to show that racial discrimination was the primary
intent behind how district lines were drawn. “That’s a very hard standard
to prove,” said Paul Smith, senior vice-president of the Campaign Legal Center.
Should the supreme court side with Alabama, Smith added, “it would allow
legislatures to undo Black and Latino-majority districts and do away with the
opportunity of people to elect their own representatives”.
The Alabama dispute epitomizes
two visceral themes that run through several of the blockbuster cases this
term: race and democracy. The race theme is central to one of the
hottest-button cases of all – the challenge to affirmative action in
universities.
On 31 October, the court will hear
oral arguments in two parallel cases, both brought by Students for Fair
Admissions, which describes its mission as “restoring color-blind principles”
to colleges and universities. The first case confronts Harvard’s race-conscious
admissions policy, claiming it discriminates against Asian Americans; the
second focuses on the University of North Carolina, which is accused of
preferring Black, Hispanic and Native American applicants at the expense of
white and Asian students.
There
is a chilling echo in the concerted attack on affirmative action that is about
to play out with what happened to Roe and Casey, the landmark abortion rulings
which the supreme court overturned in June. In both arenas - abortion and
affirmative action – legal precedent stood firm for half a century. “It’s
been the law of the land now for 50 years that universities can take into
account all aspects of a person’s background, including their race,” Smith
said. “Schools have set up their entire systems based on reliance on that being
the law, as reaffirmed multiple times by the supreme court, though it sure
seems likely they will change course this time.”
Such
a racially charged term will collide with another seminal moment for the
highest court – the arrival on the bench of the first Black woman in the
court’s 233-year history. When Ketanji Brown Jackson takes her place among the
nine justices on Monday she will be powerless to touch the conservatives’
unassailable dominance.
But like any new justice, she
will be able to put her stamp on the court during a tenure which, at 52, could
last for decades. It is perhaps unlikely that Jackson will pen excoriating dissenting opinions in her first term
on par with those written last term by fellow liberal justice Sonia Sotomayor,
who joined the court in 2009.
But it is equally implausible
that Jackson, whose parents fled the south to
escape Jim Crow segregation, will stand aside over issues as elemental as
affirmative action and racial gerrymandering. How she handles such intense
controversies as a rookie justice could reveal much about her future presence
on the bench.
The second major theme of the
coming term is democracy. In addition to the Alabama racial gerrymandering
case, the court has agreed to take on the highly polarized subject of the role
of state legislatures in federal elections.
Moore v Harper could
have “monumental implications for American democracy”, Groves believes. At the
heart of the case is the debunked “independent state legislature theory”, which has been embraced in recent years by radical
Republicans who argue that the constitution gives state legislatures the
overriding power to regulate federal elections.
Though legal scholars have
largely rejected the doctrine, four
of the nine justices – Alito, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Thomas – have
paid lip-service to some aspect of it. Should they command the majority, they
could give Republican-controlled state legislatures even more firepower to grab
what is in effect minority rule through extreme partisan gerrymandering, with
very little possible oversight from state courts.
At its most dystopian, an
extreme ruling in Moore v Harper could wreak havoc in presidential elections in
2024 and beyond. John Eastman, the conservative law professor mired in legal peril over the central role he
played in trying to overturn Joe Biden’s victory on January 6, put the
independent state legislature theory at the heart of his notorious memo laying out the roadmap for an
electoral coup.
Smith explained that the supreme
court could embolden state legislatures to dictate who wins presidential
elections in their state according to political whim. “That might be
unconstitutional under state law, but under this doctrine state courts would be
powerless to prevent them.”
As if race and the future of
American democracy were not enough, the conservative justices are also bearing
down once again on the right to
equal treatment for same-sex couples. They have taken on a case asking whether
a graphic design firm, 303 Creative LLC, should be able to turn away gay
couples requesting help creating wedding websites on religious grounds.
The supermajority also wants to
revisit the Indian Child Welfare Act, which for the past 44 years has been protecting
Native American children from being forcibly separated from their families and
tribes and placed in non-Native homes. The ACLU has
warned that if the court overturns
the act it could put “the very existence of tribes in jeopardy”.
-Ed Pilkington, The Guardian
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.